Re: RFP: jrockit -- A virtual machine for Java

2004-10-04 Thread Johan Walles
Unforturnately not; it's supposedly available upon request from "jrockit-partner at bea.com". //Johan -Original Message- From: Dalibor Topic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: debian-java@lists.debian.org Sent: Sun, 3 Oct 2004 22:52:21 + (UTC) Subject: Re: RFP: jrockit -- A virtual machine for

Re: RFP: jrockit -- A virtual machine for Java

2004-10-04 Thread Dalibor Topic
Johan Walles mailblocks.com> writes: > Unforturnately not; it's supposedly available upon request from > "jrockit-partner at bea.com". Thanks for the quick reply, Johan. Your first mission, if you chose to accept it, will be to get someone inside BEA to put up the redistribution license online,

Re: RFP: jrockit -- A virtual machine for Java

2004-10-04 Thread Johan Walles
You are absolutely right. I've asked, now we'll see what happens. I'm certain the license agreement exists. What remains to be seen is if I can extract a copy of it (but I can't see how that would be a problem). //Johan -Original Message- From: Dalibor Topic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: de

Re: IMAP implementation in JAVA

2004-10-04 Thread Chris Tilden
Maybe this is what you're looking for, http://james.apache.org/ It supports POP3 right now and IMAP is on the way. http://james.apache.org/FAQ.html#6 On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 22:09:47 +0200, Omry Yadan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > my mistake, I missed the server bit in your email :) > > > Rishabh M

Re: apt and java

2004-10-04 Thread Omry Yadan
A question comes into my mind: Was the discussion focused on how to get make java and Debian closer, or on how to avoid the horrendous sun licensing? Making Java and Debian closer is simple: use free runtimes, report bugs & help us make them better than Sun's Java implementation is all resp