HotJava

HotJava (later called HotJava Browser to distinguish it from HotJava Views) was a modular, extensible web browser from Sun Microsystems implemented in Java. It was the first browser to support Java applets, and was Sun's demonstration platform for the then-new technology.[3] It has since been discontinued and is no longer supported. Furthermore, the Sun Download Center was taken down on July 31, 2011, and the download link on the official site points to a placeholder page saying so.[4]

HotJava
HotJava 3.0 under Windows XP.
Developer(s)Sun Microsystems[1]
Initial releaseMarch 24, 1997 (1997-03-24)[1][2]
Final release
Late 2004 (2004) v3.0
Written inJava[1]
Available inEnglish
TypeWeb browser
Websitewww.oracle.com/technetwork/java/index-136232.html

Origins

In 1994, a team of Java developers started writing WebRunner, which was a clone of the internet browser Mosaic. It was based on the Java programming language. The name ‘WebRunner’ was a tribute to the Blade Runner movie.[5]

WebRunner's first public demonstration was given by John Gage and James Gosling at the Technology Entertainment Design Conference in Monterey, California in 1995. Renamed HotJava, it was officially announced in May the same year at the SunWorld conference.

The parser code was reused by the standard Java libraries.[6]

Usage

HotJava had somewhat limited functionality compared to other browsers of its time.

More critically, HotJava suffered from the inherent performance limitations of Java Virtual Machine implementations of the day (both in terms of processing speed and memory consumption) and hence was considerably sluggish.[7]

gollark: That's annoying.
gollark: Hmm, would there be some way to adjust the frequency without killing and restarting the rtl_fm process?
gollark: I *might* be.
gollark: Bold of you to assume I did any anyway.
gollark: Hmm, the most convoluted and reasonably practical way to do this would be to... use my RTL-SDR to listen to Radio 4, but hook it up to my server, run it through some kind of audio compression thing, somehow figure out how to stream the resulting audio over HTTP, then stick that on my website.

See also

References

  1. Rakitin, Jason (October 27, 1997). "Review: Alternative Web browsers". Network World Fusion. Archived from the original on October 5, 2001. Retrieved August 16, 2010.
  2. "Sun Microsystems, Inc. to Ship HotJava Browser 1.0; New Customizable Browser Enables Custom Web Interface". Business Wire. March 11, 1997. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  3. Watson, Dave (July 21, 2001). "A Quick Look at HotJava". The Southern California OS/2 User Group. Retrieved August 16, 2010.
  4. "Sun Download Center decommission". Oracle Corporation. Retrieved August 29, 2011.
  5. Byous, Jon (1998). "Java Technology: An Early History" (PDF). Sun Microsystems. Retrieved November 24, 2010.
  6. HTMLEditorKit API documentation for Java 1.4.2 "The default parser is the Hot Java parser".
  7. Killelea, Patrick (2002). Web Performance Tuning, Second Edition. O'Reilly Books.


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