Eclipse Platform e4 Just Getting Off the Ground
- By John K. Waters
- 03/25/08
The Eclipse Foundation offered attendees at last week's EclipseCon 2008 conference an early look at plans for the next generation of its Eclipse distribution and platform: Eclipse 4.0, better known as "e4."
What exactly is e4?
"The sound bite is that it's the next generation of the platform," said IBM's Mike Wilson, Eclipse Project Management Committee (PMC) member and leader of the Eclipse Platform and Incubator subprojects. "At this point, what that means is going to be defined by whoever gets involved in working on it. We're open to everything, as long as it's targeted at building a better platform and addressing the most pressing issues that are likely to impact the ongoing success of Eclipse."
The biggest issue on Wilson's Eclipse radar: the Web.
"I think it's very important for the Eclipse code base to move out to the Web, and get involved more in that space, because the world is changing," Wilson told his audience. "A lot of business software development is moving to Web-base UIs backed by services. We're also seeing the IDE world moving in that direction."
To get e4 the ball rolling, the Eclipse Platform team (led by Wilson) joined forces with the Eclipse Rich Ajax Platform (RAP) team, Wilson explained. RAP is an AJAX runtime based on the Eclipse Rich Client Platform, a framework for rich Internet application development. RAP allows developers to build rich Internet applications and programs entirely in Java, and to use the Eclipse plug-ins to modularize their applications.
Wilson was joined onstage by the leader of the RAP project, Jochen Krause, CEO of Innoopract. Also joining him were IBM's Steve Northover, PMC member and principal architect of the Standard Widget Toolkit (SWT), as well as Code 9 Founder Jeff McAffer, PMC member and leader of the Eclipse Equinox OSGi, Rich Client Platform and Orbit subprojects.
E4 is not due for two years, so these are early days for the project, said Eclipse Foundation Executive Director Mike Milinkovich. "It's new code, a new vision, and new opportunities," he said. "But it's just getting off the ground."