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ElaKiri Talk!
Java is not free anymore :(:(:(
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<blockquote data-quote="ramishka" data-source="post: 23742606" data-attributes="member: 18888"><p>Hundreds of organisations use OpenJDK on production environments. It shares 99% of the code with OracleJDK anyway( things like Java web start and the plugins are not included in OpenJDK). As for these missing 1% there are workarounds, solutions and forks that can be used to mitigate the shortcomings.</p><p>Besides, OpenJDK is the reference JDK and almost every JDK out there including the Oracle JDK is based on OpenJDK. It is maintained by Oracle's engineers, gets updates and security fixes. </p><p></p><p>Did anyone on this thread actually read up on the licensing changes? Most people look like they just read the title and jumping up and down without analyzing real facts. Oracle is adopting the same business model which Redhat uses when it comes to distributing Fedora.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ramishka, post: 23742606, member: 18888"] Hundreds of organisations use OpenJDK on production environments. It shares 99% of the code with OracleJDK anyway( things like Java web start and the plugins are not included in OpenJDK). As for these missing 1% there are workarounds, solutions and forks that can be used to mitigate the shortcomings. Besides, OpenJDK is the reference JDK and almost every JDK out there including the Oracle JDK is based on OpenJDK. It is maintained by Oracle's engineers, gets updates and security fixes. Did anyone on this thread actually read up on the licensing changes? Most people look like they just read the title and jumping up and down without analyzing real facts. Oracle is adopting the same business model which Redhat uses when it comes to distributing Fedora. [/QUOTE]
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