Development tool written entirely in Java debuts at competitive price
Framingham, MA โ After an exhaustive, lengthy beta period, Sun Microsystems Inc.โs SunSoft division is now shipping Java Workshop, its primary applications development tool kit for building Java applets and applications. A 30-day trial version software can be downloaded at https://www.sun.com/developer-products/java/tnb/index.html.
The company tested the product for an extended time in order to increase its speed, which is 30 times faster than when testing began.
SunSoft expects its Java Workshop, which has the look and feel of a Web browser, to be popular with companies that are simply adding Java applets to HTML content, as well as with professional programmers versed in the art of building full-fledged applications.
โItโs a complete Java development environment,โ said Larry Weber, vice president and general manager for SunSoftโs workshop products group.
Java Workshop will let programmers develop applications together โ even if they are in different locations โ by letting them specify Java files as URLs that can be shared across the โNet, Weber said.
Sunโs JavaSoft unit already offers the Java Developers Toolkit of APIs and Class Libraries. SunSoft said Java Workshop falls into the same tool category as Microsoft Corp.โs VBScript and Netscape Communications Corp.โs JavaScript. One edge that Java Workshop has is that it is written entirely in Java, while others only emulate Java interfaces, Weber said.
Because Java Workshop is written entirely in Java, however, developers must deal with Javaโs current weaknesses. On the other hand, Java Workshop benefits from Javaโs strengths. For example, it offers such features as the ability to debug multiple applets with a single HTML page. SunSoft stresses Java Workshopโs purpose as an Internet, not a Windows, software development environment.
Customers are happy with the final product, though some wish it would run on more platforms.
โItโs definitely speeded up,โ said Steve Rogers, vice president of online services at American Recordings Inc., which is promoting artists on the Web using applets written with the Solaris-based version of Java Workshop.
One drawback for Rogers is that Java Workshop is not available for the Macintosh. As a result, the Burbank, CA, company also uses the Macintosh-based WebBurst from PowerProduction Software (Hermosa Beach, CA).
Currently, Java Workshop, price at 9 through December 31, is available only for Solaris, Windows 95, and Windows NT. The Mac version wonโt ship until next year.


