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John talks to Mike Milinkovich, executive director of Eclipse Foundation, about the stewardship transition of enterprise Java to the foundation in 2018 and other Java-related challenges and what he ...
John Duimovich, IBM Distinguished Engineer and Java CTO, who has been watching the evolving Java ecosystem for more than 20 years, shares his expectations about the future of Java.
We enter 2018 after a year that has brought more change to the Java world than is usual. In part this is due to the arrival of Java 9, albeit almost a year late.
Java 10 is the first release on the new six-month schedule, and it builds incrementally on the significant new functionality that appeared in Java 9, which had a multiyear gestation period.
JetBrains has released the version 2018.3 of their flagship product, IntelliJ IDEA. This version brings a series of new features including support for Java 12, enhancements for Spring Boot ...
Two new major versions of Java were released in 2018. Java EE moves to the Eclipse Foundation and is rebranded as Jakarta EE.
What happened with Java in 2018? Two major forces in enterprise Java merged. And we keep finding new ways to do DevOps and Agile. This will all affect the future of Java programming.
Oracle has implemented a six-month release cadence for Java SE, with Java Development Kit 10 having shipped in March 2018 and the next version, JDK 11, due in September 2018.
IntelliJ IDEA 2018.2 adds support for Java 11, which has not been released yet. “The next version of Java is due out in September, and IntelliJ IDEA 2018.2 is ready for it.
In 2018, a large number of readers were drawn to Java developer tutorials on a variety of topics from RESTful development to continuous delivery with Jenkins CI.