Builder .au has a story about eclipse
From the article,
The availability of many Eclipse plug-ins, and the fact that developers can download Eclipse for free, has helped fuel the adoption of Eclipse with Java developers and Java software companies. The Eclipse "framework", however, can be expanded into other areas, according to Eclipse members.
Computer Associates, which will join the organisation's board this year, intends to propose an Eclipse project in systems management within the next month, according to Robert Levy, senior vice-president of data and lifecycle management at CA.
The proposal aims to make applications under development easier to manage once they're up and running, he said. The idea is to create broadly used software to let programmers add "instrumentation" to applications so that their performance can be easily tracked by systems management products, he said.
The software would also look to eliminate glitches that occur when applications are moved from development into actual use, Levy added. Microsoft has a similar technology under development in its Visual Studio 2005 Team System.
Another significant departure for Eclipse that's under development is a move into tools for building applications targeted at specific industries. In particular, the organisation is exploring a way to work with standards organisations in the health care industry, said Mike Milinkovich, executive director of Eclipse.
The goal of the project is to simplify the process of building health care applications by having built-in support for health care data-sharing standards, such as those for handling medical records, he said. "We see open source as complementary to open standards if they are prevalent," Milinkovich said.
One Eclipse member said that Eclipse software can be applied even more broadly than development tools. The Eclipse Rich Client Platform, which IBM uses in its Workplace client software, could conceivably be used as a replacement to Windows on the desktop, although no vendor has tried to sell it as such, said Michael Norman, CEO of Scapa Technologies.
Eclipse "looks remarkably like an operating system -- a modular, componentised operating system," Norman said.
1 comment:
Eclipse "looks remarkably like an operating system -- a modular, componentised operating system," Norman said.
and takes the same amount of time to start up :-)
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