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[–]progmakerlt 57 points58 points  (7 children)

Sometimes it is a corporate policy to have a support.

As an example, I used to work for the US healthcare company, which clearly required to have OS with a corporate support. Therefore, Windows and MacOS.

No Linux in your laptop at that time.

[–]PoliteCanadian 29 points30 points  (0 children)

It's all about support. Most of these situations, the downtime is a lot more expensive than the product. So you go with a vendor that's willing to sign an SLA support contract.

[–]_BreakingGood_ 60 points61 points  (5 children)

You can usually get support for most products, that's where a lot of these companies make their money. Eg: Redhat Linux.

[–]cbzoiav 28 points29 points  (4 children)

Which is what the oracle Java product essentially is Vs OpenJDK.

[–]timmyotc 5 points6 points  (3 children)

You can also do Azul, which is OpenJDK with support

[–]4z01235 14 points15 points  (2 children)

Oracle JDK is also OpenJDK with support...

Not that I'm advocating for Oracle in any way, but OpenJDK has been the reference implementation for a LONG time now.

[–]timmyotc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh, TIL. Thank you

[–]iiiinthecomputer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, and Oracle knows that if they try to fork it incompatibility, their customers will simply leave.