+ 6
Is Java 11 is paid ?
9 Antworten
+ 6
Yes, it's free.
From what i have read so far.
They changed the license of their implementation so you need to now pay to use Oracle's JDK if you are using it for commercial reasons or to get updates after a new version like java12 is out. Though you can use other free implementations just fine.
" Oracle's JDK (commercial) — you can use this in development and testing for free, but if you use it in production, you have to pay for it
Oracle's OpenJDK (open source) — you can use this for free in any environment, like any open source library." -- 1st link below
https://dzone.com/articles/using-java-11-in-production-important-things-to-kn
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nFGazvrCvHMZJgFstlbzoHjpAVwv5DEdnaBr_5pKuHo/mobilebasic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nB7tcf9wnk0&t=332s
+ 3
Lord Krishna so if I make an app on google play with java will I have to pay?
+ 3
free
+ 2
No it is free of cost
+ 2
If we have to pay for java there will be a strong reduction of java users
+ 2
@What does the JUMP_LINK__&&__Python__&&__JUMP_LINK say?
After extensive search the answer is still yes. Android apps are created with Android Studio which supports all features of java 7, but only a subset of java 8, even then it uses open-jdk 8, so this should not matter much for current android app development.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/47627603
+ 2
https://www.sololearn.com/Discuss/1522258/?ref=app
+ 2
The Java package – that will already be available within your organisation – includes a tool called “Java Usage Tracker” that will report on:
The Java versions
Application name
Type (applet, command line etc.)
Location
And more. While this may seem like the perfect tool to help find what Java you have, and where, there is one big caveat:
Oracle Java Usage Tracker requires a commercial license – even though it is included in the installer for the free components.
How does your SAM tool handle Java?
What’s on the roadmap?
The Oracle Java SE Roadmap site tells us that:
“… Oracle will not post further updates of Java SE 8 to its public download sites for commercial use after January 2019. Customers who need continued access to critical bug fixes and security fixes as well as general maintenance for Java SE 8 or previous versions can get long term support through Oracle Java SE Advanced, Oracle Java SE Advanced Desktop, or Oracle Java SE Suite”
New release schedule
Oracle, possibly taking a leaf out of Microsoft’s book, are changing the Java SE release cadence to every 6 months – rather than the 3 years between Java SE 8 and 9. This change will take effect from September 2018.
Pricing
For organisations that, for one reason or another, are unable to upgrade all their Java to the “latest major releases of the Oracle JDK or OpenJDK” – what are the costs going to look like?
https://crbtech.in/java-training/become-java-programmer-developer/
+ 1
java 10 is free but java 11 ?