Azul, the only company 100% focused on Java, released its second annual Azul State of Java Survey & Report today, offering insights into how organizations leverage Java in an evolving technology ...
State of Java Survey & Report shows that the shift away from Oracle Java continues based on Oracle's employee-based pricing.
Only around one in ten Oracle Java customers are likely to stick around following costly licensing changes Big Red made to its development and runtime environments in January 2023, according to ...
Half of organizations that use or deploy Java-based applications and infrastructure also use Java to code AI functionality, ...
In the State of Java Report 2025, the Java platform Azul publishes trends in the Java world such as the use of the language ...
Oracle changed its licensing model for Java two years ago to base the cost on the number of employees an organization has.
The "tip and tail" release model represents a significant step forward, offering revolutionary changes that are ambitious but ...
This week's Java roundup for January 20th, 2025 features news highlighting: JEP 502, Stable Values (Preview); Oracle's ...
Java 11 is getting long in the tooth, so many developers are moving to the next oldest version that's still supported, Java 17. Here's what's different.
Did you know over 90% of new programmers start with Java? It’s because Java is easy to learn and very useful. This makes Java ...
Another catch-up concerns CVE-2024-45492, a flaw in the XML parsing library LibExpat that Oracle uses in several products.