Title :
Theory versus practice in real-time computing with the JavaTM platform
Abstract :
The discipline of computer science has always featured a large gap between theory and practice. For example, both the object oriented paradigm and garbage collection techniques go back to at least the 1960s (H. Schorr and W. Waite, 1967; O.J. Dahl and K. Nygard, 1966) but they have only seen widespread commercial acceptance this decade. The Java TM programming language has been an important factor leading to the commercial popularization of these techniques. The field of real time computing has suffered from a particularly acute disconnect between theory and practice. JavaTM technology can be applied to the building of real time systems through a set of standard extensions to the JavaTM platform. A set of extensions that bring the core benefits of the platform to real time will advance the commercial state of the art. It will help to narrow the gap between theory and practice. The paper explores different aspects of computer systems theory as applied to real time systems. It analyzes whether they are ready to be reduced to practice and standardized
Keywords :
Java; object-oriented programming; real-time systems; storage management; system theory; Java platform; Java programming language; commercial acceptance; commercial popularization; commercial state of the art; computer systems theory; garbage collection techniques; object oriented paradigm; real time computing; real time systems; standard extensions; Art; Computer languages; Computer science; Hardware; Java; Object oriented programming; Real time systems; Software systems; Sun; Virtual manufacturing;
Conference_Titel :
Object-Oriented Real-Time Distributed Computing, 1999. (ISORC '99) Proceedings. 2nd IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Saint-Malo
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0207-5
DOI :
10.1109/ISORC.1999.776358