Java turns 30, and there's no stopping it now
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Java turns 30, and there's no stopping it now
"Java is the 'here to stay' language for enterprise applications... it is not the go-to language anymore for smaller applications."
"Clearly, it's not going away."
"Java continues to deliver what developers want and businesses need: independence, scalability, and resilience."
"It has been—and will continue to be—a foundational language."
Paul Jansen, CEO of a software quality services company, believes Java is crucial for enterprise applications, though it's losing ground for smaller projects due to verbosity and performance issues. Kohsuke Kawaguchi, recognized for the Java-based Hudson CI/CD tool, maintains that Java's importance isn't waning. Scott Sellers from Azul highlights that 99% of surveyed companies utilize Java, which supports essential business operations. Java's evolution includes applications in cloud computing and AI, suggesting a robust future as it adapts while maintaining its foundational strengths of independence and resilience.
Read at InfoWorld
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