Welcome to JavaPolis 2007!
OpenJDK: The First Year
OpenJDK
May 2006...
May 2006
November 2006
8 May 2007
8 May 2007
The rest of the code (almost)
The rest of the code (almost)
8 May 2007
Governance
Governance
Governance Board
Governance Board
The OpenJDK Charter
Interim Governance Board
Interim Governance Board
Interim Governance
Interim Governance
Interim Governance
The big bang
Expanding the universe
8 May 2007
8 May 2007, 9:29am PDT
8 May 2007, 2:46pm PDT
9 May 2007, 3:06am PDT
7 June 2007
23 May 2007
23 May 2007
27 June 2007
July 2007
9 August 2007
28 September 2007
9 October 2007
5 November 2007
5 November 2007
5 November 2007
13 November 2007
31 October 2007
4 December 2007
5 December 2007
11 December 2007
12 December 2007
12 December 2007
Summary: Encumbrances
Summary: Encumbrances
Summary: Encumbrances
Summary: Encumbrances
Summary: Groups & Projects
Summary: Related efforts
Coming in 2008 ...
Coming in 2008 ...
I need you
How to get involved
How to get involved
23-24 February 2008
In November of 2006 Sun announced that it would publish the JDK source code under the GNU General Public License and build a community around that code. This talk will review the progress of that effort so far, show the different ways in which developers can get involved, and discuss what's yet to come.
Mark Reinhold is the Chief Engineer for the Java™ Platform, Standard Edition, at Sun Microsystems. His past contributions to the platform include character-stream readers and writers, reference objects, shutdown hooks, the NIO high-performance I/O APIs, library generification, and service loaders. He was the lead engineer for the 1.2 and 5.0 releases and the specification lead for Java SE 6. He currently leads the engineering team for the OpenJDK project and also serves as chair of the OpenJDK Governance Board. Mark holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.