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Apple's portables for Java developers?

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Lars Hoss

Posts: 21
Nickname: woeye
Registered: Jul, 2003

Lars Hoss is a programmer focusing on J2EE and Objective-C on MacOS X
Apple's portables for Java developers? Posted: Jul 5, 2003 10:02 AM
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This post originated from an RSS feed registered with Java Buzz by Lars Hoss.
Original Post: Apple's portables for Java developers?
Feed Title: WoEyE's weblog
Feed URL: http://woeye.highteq.net/xml/weblog/woeye.rss
Feed Description: The personal weblog of WoEyE. Mostly about J2EE and MacOS X.
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Many of you may wonder if an Apple notebook for Java development may be worth a switch. Since MacOS X Apple provides an interesting platform for developers thanks to its BSD roots. Many usefull tools from the BSD and Linux comunities are available and easy to install. Apple even has ported JDK 1.4.1 to its operating system. So from the point of software availability everthing looks bright. Right. But software needs a hardware platfrom to run on. And that's the point where dark clouds are hiding the blue sky. Their fastest portable today are the 15" and 17" PowerBooks running at 1GHz. The flagship the 17" PowerBook features a 1GHz G4, 1MB L3 cache and 512MB RAM. Although Steve told us that this machine is very fast I can tell you it does not. At least for Java development. Here's how I found out:
A friend of mine owns the 15" PowerBook running at 1GHz with 1MB L3 cache. Therefore these machines are mostly identical from the speed view. The 17", however, features DDR333 memory. But many of us know that this is more or less a marketing gag because the current G4 cannot take full advantage of DDR RAM. But back to my story. Together my friend and my installed JDK 1.4.1 and JBoss on the PowerBook. "Booting" JBoss takes around 20-25 seconds. On my little iBook 800 it takes around 35 seconds. Yesterday another friend of mine bought the new Acer TravelMate 800 for 2200 Euros. It features the new Centrino technologie from Intel. Although it is clocked at 1.6GHz only the performance correspondes to a 2.4 GHz desktop CPU. Our little tests proved that, e.g. compiling a very large C++ project on both the Acer notebook and an Intel based desktop PC. Now you may wonder how fast JBoss boots on this peace of hardware?
Around 7 seconds.
Boom. That's a noticeable difference for sure! Everything feels *very* fluid and sleek. IDEA feels like a native app and so does Eclipse.
Apple fans may say now: But PeeCee notebooks are noisy and running out of battery very fast. Wrong! This Acer is comfortable quiet. The fan seldom activates. And the runtime is nice as well: 3.5 ours are no problem.
Although I am not a great fan of the operating system running on the Acer (WinXP Pro) I am still convinced that a Centrino based notebook is the best what you can get for you bucks if your main focus is on Java software development. Compiling debugging and running Java apps needs pure CPU power which Apple has poorly failed to deliver. I really hope that Apple will switch to the new PPC970 processor as soon as possible and replace the outdated G4.

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