2019-08-08

Five Myths About Java



Reference URL: https://dzone.com/articles/5-myths-about-how-java-is-upgrading-to-become-bett

Five Myths About Java

Mark Reinhold addressed the top five misconceptions (otherwise known as fear, uncertainty, and doubt, or FUD) about the new Java release model:
  1. Feature releases will be disruptive for past releases - not true. Mark Reinhold said, "The rate of innovation has not changed, the rate of innovation distribution is changing."
  2. For removing an old feature, it must be deprecated three years in advance. “Not true, for removing a deprecated feature, it requires a production-ready build that issues a suitable warning at either compile-time or runtime because a working build, after all, is the ultimate release method.”  
  3. Your support will end for any non-LTS release after six months and not more than three years for the LTS release. "That's not true; it depends on what the non-Oracle members of the JDK community decide to do. Oracle has a proven track record and is already discussing how best to support JDK 8 and JDK 11 for the long haul.”  
  4. Non-long-term-support releases are just another name for a beta. “No, the only difference with an LTS release is that it has a longer support timeline,” Reinhold said, “You can still use a non-LTS release in production if you like, but you’ll have to update it in six months or find someone to support it or support it yourself.”
  5. If you maintain an infrequent migrated system, you can ignore non-LTS releases, " Reinhold claims this is also not true, claiming, "if you test with each feature release, then you are ready to migrate to the next long-term support release.”  
What do you think about the new release cycle? Let us know in the comments below!








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