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20070913 Thursday September 13, 2007

Project Hamburg

All the folks in Sun Javaland (and yes, the Sun Accessibility Program Office is wedged in there -- go figure) today received an email with the following announcement:

Welcome to Project Hamburg, formerly known as 'Consumer JRE' (aka 'Consumer release')!

Effective immediately, the code name 'Project Hamburg' must be used instead of 'Consumer JRE' , 'Consumer release', or any other 'Consumer' variant.
...

This change has been approved by various people in Sun Java management and its use has been OK'ed by Sun's Trademark and Branding teams.

There was an FAQ included with this announcement, answering such questions as:

We are encouraged to mention the code name change to people who have already heard about 'Consumer JRE' or 'Consumer release' through our presentations at JavaOne, through the Java.net blogs, or through other means.

So I've just done that.

The naming change is interesting. Here's the answer to the "Why Project Hamburg" question:

We recognize that code names and product names are a very hot topic at Sun, and we do not expect everybody to like this new code name. However, in the interest of time, and with the objective to avoid any potential trademark litigation, Java marketing came to the conclusion that using 'Project' + a location name was the best way to go.

Project Hamburg was proposed as a reference to the fact Thorsten Laux, who has been championing this project, has lived for many years in Hamburg, Germany. Additionally, there are a number of interesting facts that can be highlighted with regards to Hamburg (see entry in Wikipedia):

  • Hamburg has a rich commerce history going back to the medieval Hanseatic league (there's an easy parallel that can be established between an alliance of trading guilds, such as the Hanseatic league, and the JCP)

  • Hamburg is the largest city in the European Union which is not a national capital (this project is introducing significant changes to the JRE without being associated to any new JSR)

  • Hamburg is commonly referred as StarDivision's original location (the right answer is Lunenburg, located about 50km southeast of Hamburg)

And finally, here (from somebody who probably wishes to remain anonymous), are the top ten comments received, after the renaming:

  1. I'd like mine with cheese, please.
  2. The "mystery meat" is Duke's big toe.
  3. Warning: eating undercooked code can cause system failure.
  4. Let's hope it comes bug free.
  5. Say it right to keep yourself out of a pickle.
  6. P.H. balanced for your hair washing pleasure.
  7. I was just getting used to the change from SUNW to JAVA.
  8. Lettuce know if there will be another name change soon.
  9. What if I'm vegetarian?
  10. Beats Project Frankfurt, I guess.

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( Sep 13 2007, 12:12:53 PM PDT ) [Listen] Permalink Comments [3]

Comments:

Of course, the people behind the name change do know that Hamburg was also one of the most bombarded city during WWII? :) Not that I would be wishing any harm to the project.. especialy any holes in it ;)

Posted by nbw on September 13, 2007 at 01:19 PM PDT #

[Trackback] They are apparently renaming the consumer release of the Java Runtime Environment to ‘Project Hamburg’. Rich Burridge gives us some insight in this article as to why Sun thinks this is a good idea. Apparently trademark considerations are on...

Posted by Zaphod for President on September 14, 2007 at 05:31 AM PDT #

"We recognize that code names and product names are a very hot topic at Sun, and we do not expect everybody to like this new code name."

From my persepctive as a Sun employee based in the Hamburg office, a US citizen who's lived here for over twenty years, I'd like to say that I expect _everybody_ to like this new code name.

It's quite true that code and product names are very hot topics at Sun, and this choice is far better than certain other, uh, decisions that Sun marketing has made about product names in the past (better I should forever hold my peace about what specifically I'm thinking of right now). The markedroids appear to be learning something.

Sun's development for StarOffice/OpenOffice is based in Hamburg -- we've all moved into their office, which had been the location of StarDivision before it was acquired by Sun, so the programmers are now all just down the hall from me. This is something to be quite proud of.

Hamburg is a fine town, and if you didn't know that, you're missing something good. Maybe this code name will get more people aware of that, which can only be a Very Good Thing.

Posted by Geoff Simmons on September 21, 2007 at 01:49 AM PDT #

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