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“Just gave a real elevator pitch (in a real elevator) about what SAP Blogger’s Corner here is about.”
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Mike seems to have adopted Leisa Reichelt’s post-it note presentatilon style. On another note your log in system is bOrked mike. i used my MSDN credentials and still couldnt log in. Annoying that.
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Isn’t it time to stop calling it a JVM? It needs be an xVM to provide value. Time to reboot. JVM2.0 anyone?
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Stephen has written to this before.
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“I’d like to give some props to humility. Let’s bow down to the fact that basically we don’t know diddly—particularly when we think we do. Let’s celebrate humility, which leads to honesty, and then perhaps to curiosity. Humility is the starting
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Very interesting. When management pays attention to workers even through fairly arbitrary measures (lights up or lights down) productivity increases. Hey Anne what tag should I use for your theory?
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Top Ten ways to create a fascist dictatorship.
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Why BMC hired William Hurley. Really smart and knows how to throw a dog a bone. IF Gartner is right and OSS is coming to systems management BMC is the one thinking most radically for that transition. Is that BMC-supported Nagios I smell baking?
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I am with Rob on this one. IBM is not the only objector to fast-track OOXML standardisation. Its an interesting Frame by Microsoft, but I don’t think it has legs.
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an XML format for describing green buildings. how about that.
James Governor's Monkchips
links for 2007-04-25
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Simon Phipps says:
April 27, 2007 at 2:09 am
It’s only time to stop calling it a “JVM” if you think the “J” only stood for a programming language. I’ve regarded the J word as the name for a VM platform ever since I first saw it in 1995 (at IBM) and I am thrilled we’re finally removing the “programming language” blinkers to see the value of the platform.
More specifically, all the time it’s a virtual machine for executing Java Bytecode it will be a JVM, IMO.