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Groups > comp.lang.java.programmer > #38730

Re: Release Frequency

Newsgroups comp.lang.java.programmer
Date 2019-02-24 18:15 -0800
References <releases-20190224155750@ram.dialup.fu-berlin.de> <gdg1lqF8njgU1@mid.individual.net> <q4un2b$369$1@dont-email.me>
Message-ID <c8d87b74-d164-48e3-979e-151d8f5370e8@googlegroups.com> (permalink)
Subject Re: Release Frequency
From bursejan@gmail.com

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I guess the release frequence is in revers proportion
to the speed of the new JDKs. I get for the same
byte code on the same mac machine:

JDK 1.8.0 202 : 9'126 ms

GraalVM 1.0.0 rc12 : 9'667 ms

JDK 13 : 13'646 ms

And the winner is, good ole JDK 1.8. Interestingly
on a newer windows machine, the winner is GraalVM.
Unix, I didn't test.

On Sunday, February 24, 2019 at 7:16:51 PM UTC+1, Daniele Futtorovic wrote:
> On 2019-02-24 18:13, Robert Klemme wrote:
> > On 24.02.19 16:05, Stefan Ram wrote:
> > 
> >>   Someone writes a book on Java SE 12 - It's outdate on its
> >>   release date already (or at least readers might think so
> >>   when they read that Java SE 13 is out).
> > 
> > Are books still a thing?  I thought this was so 20th century...
> 
> Right. He meant: a podcast that you can listen to while eating while
> exercising while repainting your home.

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Thread

Re: Release Frequency Robert Klemme <shortcutter@googlemail.com> - 2019-02-24 18:13 +0100
  Re: Release Frequency Daniele Futtorovic <da.futt.news@laposte-dot-net.invalid> - 2019-02-24 19:16 +0100
    Re: Release Frequency bursejan@gmail.com - 2019-02-24 18:15 -0800
      Re: Release Frequency Graeme Geldenhuys <graemeg@example.net> - 2019-04-08 12:37 +0100
        Re: Release Frequency Arne Vajhøj <arne@vajhoej.dk> - 2019-04-13 22:45 -0400

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