Word: java
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...buzz ROBERT SEIDMAN, NetGuide: "MSN uses the television metaphor to organize its service, where everything's a channel or a program. It makes MSN extremely easy to navigate and lets the service take advantage of new technologies like Java and ActiveX...
...last night, students in an introduction to Java programming class at the Harvard Extension School got the chance to show their work to representatives of Lycos, Inc. and Digital Equipment Corporation's Alta Vista...
...students are using Java, a programming language that operates across the web, to create new user interfaces. Browsers use the interface as a first level of access to the web and to search for new sites...
...down, easy-to-use communications device would cost less than $500, plug seamlessly into all kinds of computer networks and lure millions of technophobic home users onto the Internet. Best of all, as far as McNealy and Ellison are concerned, it would be based on a new programming language, Java, that promises to make obsolete today's overstuffed computer operating systems and feature-heavy application programs--the bread and butter of their bitterest enemy, Microsoft CEO Bill Gates...
First to ship is Sun's JavaStation, a sleek, streamlined machine designed to make maximum use of the Java language (which Sun developed) and the vast storage capacity of the Internet (which runs largely on Sun's computer servers). Unlike most PCs, the JavaStation has no hard drive, doesn't play CD-ROMs and takes no floppies. Users are supposed to store their personal files on the servers and download whatever little application programs (or "applets") they need directly from the Net. The price of the base machine, with one fast microSPARCII chip, starts at $750. By the time...