Oracle released a new version of their former JRockit-only tooling Mission Control
Suite (JRMC). The 4.1 version is a minor version upgrade which directly
follow the 4.0.1 which was released way back middle 2010. But even if
the version number indicates,...
1 replies - 2366 views - 12/19/11 by Markus Eisele in News
In this article I would like to elaborate on the garbage collection
specifics of Oracle's JRockit JVM. Recently JRockit has been made free for use
and many people may consider using it instead of another widely popular Oracle
JVM - HotSpot (former Sun's JVM)....
2 replies - 6138 views - 07/12/11 by Alexey Ragozin in Articles
As a result of Oracle's strategy to merge HotSpot and JRockit into a single best-of-breed JVM, JRockit is now free for development and internal production use on general purpose computers. Use in external production and other non-general computers is...
0 replies - 19015 views - 05/18/11 by Jim Moscater in Daily Dose
Tweets coming out of the weekend's QCon conference revealed Oracle's plan for a premium JVM that comes with a price tag. Adam Messinger, the Oracle VP of development made the announcement saying that Oracle still plans to develop a free and open source...
3 replies - 20444 views - 11/08/10 by Mitchell Pronsc... in Daily Dose
Although this "100 day" release of GlassFish 3.0.1 is relatively minor, there are several features that make this version noteworthy. First, there's support for Oracle's JRockit JVM thanks to the merger. Even more platforms are supported, such...
0 replies - 11528 views - 06/20/10 by Mitchell Pronsc... in Daily Dose
The renewed Oracle TechCasts kicked off today with Mark Reinhold talking about JDK 7 and answering questions from viewers. Reinhold discussed the significant things he is working on in the OpenJDK Project and he revealed some of the preliminary explorations...
3 replies - 12070 views - 02/16/10 by Mitchell Pronsc... in Articles
Oracle believes Java is integral part of the upcoming transformation of the Enterprise to more Web-2.0-like -- to adopt the look and feel of Web 2.0 and fulfill the funtional expectations of the typical Web 2.0 user (creating informational mashups, creating...
0 replies - 3472 views - 05/08/08 by Greg Matus in News