News

WebAssembly JVM promises to run ‘very large’ unmodified Java applications in modern browsers without plugins or a Java installation.
Just in time for the new year, there's a new Java zero-day exploit out in the wild. It's already being used by criminals to attack your Web browser, and the only defense is to disable Java for ...
A recent Java 7 update allows users to completely prevent Java applications from running inside browsers or to restrict how Web-based Java content is handled by the Java Runtime Environment (JRE ...
That said, what it recommends as a replacement is still a Java-based technology for launching full applications from a browser link. Flash and Java are the two biggest holdouts in ridding the Web ...
Apple has further distanced itself from Oracle's Java software framework with a Mac update released on Wednesday that removes a Java plugin from all Mac-compatible Web browsers. Users who install ...
As Oracle mentions above, Java isn’t going away any time soon, but web developers and businesses who rely on the app-like functionality in their browsers based on the Java applet will have to ...
Oracle will retire the Java browser plug-in, frequently the target of Web-based exploits, about a year from now. Remnants, however, will likely linger long after that. “Oracle plans to deprecate ...
While Apache continues to rule the web server roost, a host of lighter and zippier web and application servers may now be a better choice to host your high-performance web-based apps. They focus ...
Next year, the Java browser plug-in, which is frequently the target of Web-based exploits, will be retired by Oracle.
Oh, Java, Java, Java. No sooner had Oracle patched a widely reported critical flaw in its cross-platform software environment than another Java zero-day exploit — one against which there's no ...
E*Trade provides a very impressive, Java-based application for monitoring stocks' prices and linking back to their Web-based trading application. The JNLP file is delivered through the browser, and ...