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Java on the client side has turned into a malicious hacker's best friend, and developers really don't need it anymore. In fact, it's causing them more problems than it's worth. Although using Java lets a developer avoid writing custom code for the various versions of Windows and OS X, whether for native apps or browser client functions, the fact is that apps get tied to a specific Java version. Developers have a version-management problem anyway.
You'd think that IT organizations would have stomped out client-side Java long ago. I regularly hear IT folks moan about how they can't upgrade some users to Internet Explorer 8 because some specialty app they're running only works with the Java supported by IE6. I even know some who've had to give users two PCs because one app uses a Java version supported only by IE7 and another app uses Java supported only by IE8, which both can't be installed on the same PC. Java is the problem.
You'd think that IT organizations would have stomped out client-side Java long ago. I regularly hear IT folks moan about how they can't upgrade some users to Internet Explorer 8 because some specialty app they're running only works with the Java supported by IE6. I even know some who've had to give users two PCs because one app uses a Java version supported only by IE7 and another app uses Java supported only by IE8, which both can't be installed on the same PC. Java is the problem.
http://www.javaworld...-java-dead.html

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