• Home
  • Research
  • What We Offer
  • Who We Are
  • Blog
  • Your cart is empty.
  • Log in
  • Purchase
  • Free Sample
  • Contact
  • Recent Entries
  • Get Custom Feeds
Team Blog
Thomas

Rest in Peace, Java 1.4

Added By Kas Thomas at 25-Oct-2008 |

October 30 marks what could be a bitter-sweet day for Java aficionados -- and administrators tasked with supporting various JRE and JDK deployments throughout an organization. On that day, the Java 1.4 family officially reaches end-of-service-life (EOSL) status. You can read more about it on Sun's Business Support Road Map page.

Java 1.4 (now at level 1.4.2) was released in February 2002 and went on to become the most widely deployed (and arguably most stable) Java releases in the platform's history. It was the first Java version to support 64-bit architectures, and it was the first distribution to have built-in support for DOM, SAX, and XSLT. It brought superior security capabilities, including support for Microsoft's NTLM protocol as well as Transport Layer Security and Kerberos V5. In addition, it featured a new access-control API known as JAAS (Java Authentication and Authorization Service).

There were countless enhancements in 1.4 to make Java enterprise-friendly. A new network I/O package dramatically increased the number of simultaneous connections that a server could handle by removing the need to dedicate one thread to every open connection. File I/O suddenly became up to twice as fast as before, with support for file locking, memory-mapped files, and multiple concurrent read/write operations. Long-overdue feature enhancements related to runtime debugging and troubleshooting appeared, along with many other welcome changes.

But as of October 30, Java 1.4.2 will, as I say, be deprecated. So, review your Portal, Web CMS, ECM, DAM, and other systems across your enterprise. If you have any Java 1.4.2 dependencies, now would be a good time to take note of them and develop a strategy for migrating to Java 5, if you haven't already. Or (failing that), get in touch with vendors to see what their roadmaps are with regard to Java version support. Note that if you need to migrate to Java 5, it too is near end-of-life: it's scheduled to reach EOSL next year at this time.

And you thought planned obsolescence only happened in the auto industry?

 

Next steps: Get a free research sample or purchase complete vendor evaluations to obtain immediate access.

Categories: Enterprise Content Management, Web Content Management, Industry Standards

Tweet

My Research

Remember MeForgot password?

Not a subscriber? Learn about our subscriptions

Categories

Channel

  • Collaboration & Community Software (161)
  • Component Content Management (79)
  • Digital Asset Management (141)
  • Enterprise Content Management (615)
  • Evaluating SharePoint (131)
  • Portals and Content Integration (351)
  • Search and Information Access (297)
  • SharePoint Across the Enterprise (68)
  • Web Analytics (172)
  • Web Content Management (860)

Analyst

  • Adriaan Bloem (99)
  • Tony Byrne (986)
  • Apoorv Durga (34)
  • Jarrod Gingras (49)
  • Alan Pelz-Sharpe (229)
  • Theresa Regli (88)

Topics

  • Asia-Pacific Marketplace (5)
  • Building Business Case (237)
  • Cloud Computing (10)
  • E-Discovery (13)
  • European Marketplace (30)
  • Governance (29)
  • Green Computing (1)
  • Implementation (324)
  • Industry Events (20)
  • Industry Standards (197)
  • Information Architecture (162)
  • Intranets (14)
  • Marketplace at Large (918)
  • Mobile Computing (5)
  • Open Source (128)
  • Selecting Technology (911)
  • Services Oriented Architecture (9)
  • Software-as-a-Service (26)
  • Usability (5)
  • Vendor Viability & Financials (198)
  • XML (93)

Industries

  • Energy (4)
  • Finance (13)
  • Government (34)
  • Health Care (12)
  • Higher Ed (20)
  • Legal (18)
  • Manufacturing (7)
  • Pharma (6)
  • Publishing-Media (17)
  • Retail (9)

Dates

  • 2010 (207)
  • 2009 (292)
  • 2008 (345)
  • 2007 (294)
  • 2006 (206)
  • 2005 (222)
  • 2004 (109)
  • 2003 (100)
  • 2002 (97)
  • 2001 (44)

Have Questions?

Sales & Customer Support

+1 800 325 6190 (USA)+44 (0) 20 3318 1911 (UK)+1 617 340 6464 (Int'l)sales@realstorygroup.com support@realstorygroup.com

All other inquiries: info@realstorygroup.com

Copyright, 2001 - 2010, Real Story Group. All rights reserved.

  • Contact Us
  • Copyright Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Vendor Evaluations

  • Collaboration & Community Software
  • Digital Asset Management
  • Enterprise Content Management
  • Portals & Content Integration
  • Search & Information Access
  • SharePoint Across the Enterprise
  • Web Analytics
  • Web Content Management

What You Get

  • Vendor Evaluations
  • Advisory Papers
  • One-on-One Advice
  • Online Education
  • Consulting Services
  • Free Research Sample
  • Purchase Now

Need Help?

  • Research & Advisory
       Overview
  • Talk to an Expert
  • FAQs
  • Customer Support
  • Contact Sales Team

Who We Are

  • We're Different
  • Our Team
  • Media
  • Customer List
  • Events
  • Contact Us

Get the real story via our bi-weekly newsletter.

Follow us on: RSS twitter

Log In

Remember MeForgot password?