Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | arkad's commentslogin

I admire Germany's approach and awareness. At least they try. There's 20-years old saga of linux vs windows battle in the Munich City Council [1]. Great case study.

I'm very curious how this will work for them. It's quite a struggle to adopt OSS where the vast majority of users think "Office suite" == "M$ Office".

[1] - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiMux


I can confirm that a couple of public libraries have the computer terminals running some version of SuSE with KDE.


I'd say the vast majority of users think "Office suite" == "Google Docs." I don't know the last time I've touched a locally installed office suite whether MS Office or LibreOffice.


Your sample is not representative. Plenty of people still use MS Office. It's not only local install anymore either now that they have an online version.


It's probably fairer to say Google Docs OR Office365--though in my personal experience I see Google a lot more. But how many people are actually installing local copies of office productivity suites? I certainly don't see them when people send documents around.


The inertia of Java projects is huge. IMHO the future of Java depends on the perception that can be created for Java as an attractive ecosystem for greenfield projects.


At our company, most of the greenfield projects (with a high-performance profile) are in Java. So, for what our anecdotal example is worth, I can confirm that Java is used for new projects. IMHO, Java fell a bit behind with the rise of the microservices/lambda paradigm because of its memory footprint and slow start. On the other hand, it's an amazing piece of technology, and I would expect that with ahead-of-time compilation and JVM snapshots, it will become more appealing for these use cases.


I genuinely like Java and find Spring Boot enables me to be more productive and let me focus on the business logic. Spring Boot may seem a bit scary for junior developers with its focus on "magical" annotations, but once you get past the initial learning threshold it really pays off relatively quickly due to the eco system of modules that work well together.

There are of course smaller Java frameworks that you can use if you have made an honest try and dont like Spring, but the eco system is hard to beat. Go also does not have any benefits that are of any real value to me. I have admittedly not tried Elixir, but it seems to me that the mature eco system around Java is better for someone like me who is not interested in spending time on less mature 3rd party dependencies. I like the concept behind Phoenix Liveview, so I will try it sometime.

Java as a language has improved a lot recently, and while there it could be better at handling nulls, it's not enough to make me choose Kotlin.

If you had told me I would have Java+Spring Boot as my first choice 10 years ago, I would have doubted you. Java at the time seemed to stagnate, but this has changed .



My humble prediction is that with introduction of ahead-of-time compilation and JVM snapshots the adoption of Java based microservices will increase. These upcoming Java features open new interesting doors.


It's funny how this is a common fallacy. I thought exactly the same when Barings Bank was sold for one British Pound back in 1995 [1].

[1] - https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/baringsbank.asp


Improvise, adapt, overcome.


Embrace, extend, and extinguish


Veni, vidi, vici


Shit, shower, shave


Jump, jive and wail?


VVVVVV


Right, enterprises should get rid of Java just the same way as they did with COBOL... Oh, wait...


If football rules allow all body parts except hands then a logical name would be Nohandball.


Footheadchestknee ball doesn't quite roll off the tongue as well, so nohandball it is.


> The screen is just small enough to be too annoying to do anything really distracting on

I'm a happy user of Jelly 2 for a half year now and I bought it for this single reason. It's fully featured so you can do anything, but the screen is so small that you do it only when there's a real need, so I'm not wasting time staring at the phone for no real reason.

Cons: My co-workers make fun of me :)

Edit: formatting


They're just Jelly


I can imagine there will often be comments along the line of „What’s that, a phone for ants?“


Consider applying for YC's Summer 2026 batch! Applications are open till May 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: