Oracle removes serialisation from Java
Changing the dog's breakfast
Oracle plans to drop serialisation feature from Java which has been causing it huge security problems.
Oracle puts the squeeze on Java business users
Pay up or you will not get patches and security updates
Business users of Java SE 8 have been told that they will no longer receive patches and security updates for the software from the beginning of next year, unless they write a cheque for a commercial licence.
Oracle gives up on Enterprise Java
Opens the open sauce bottle
Oracle wants to give up leading the development of enterprise Java and is looking for an open source foundation to take on the role.
RedMonk blesses JavaScript as the world’s most popular language
Followed by Java and Python
Beancounters at RedMonk have taken time out from their busy prayer wheels to create a list of the world’s most popular programming languages.
Oracle continues to hassle Google over Android
Java row goes on and on and on
Oracle has decided that it is not going to give up trying to convince the world that Google owes it billions for Android software.
Oracle to give up on Java plug-in
End of an error
Oracle has decided that keeping its Java plug-in for browsers is completely pointless.
Google gives Oracle Chinese burn
Revenge served lightly chilled
After being bullied by Oracle lawyers over its use of Java in Android for so long, Google is wasting no time sticking the boot in.
Oracle appears to be planning the death of Java Enterprise Edition
Community-driven tech is not where it is at
Oracle is quietly pulling funding and development efforts away from Java Enterprise Edition, in a move that mirrors Oracle’s moves in OpenSolaris and continued with OpenOffice.org.
Oracle claims Google has killed Open Source
Before Oracle could do it
Oracle claims that Google’s court-room win gaining fair-use rights over a thousand lines of java APIs in Android will mean that Open Source is dead.
Google shoots down Oracle case
Java Applets were fair use
Google has won a major US court battle with software firm Oracle after a jury ruled it did not nick parts of the Java programming language.