Oracle offers the Java Cloud Service, a PaaS supporting the fast and easy development of Java applications.
$0.15
Comparison Price (/vCPU)
Oracle Java SE Subscription
Score 8.6 out of 10
N/A
Oracle Java SE Subscription combines license and support into a subscription to enable users to manage Java SE installations, updates and upgrades across the enterprise. The former Java SE Advanced, Java SE Advanced Desktop, and Java SE Suite products have transitioned to a Java SE Subscriptions. Beyond the unlicensed version, purchasers of Oracle Java SE Subscription receive all-hours access to My Oracle Support, enterprise monitoring, management, and deployment features, and early access to…
$2.50
per named user per month
Pricing
Oracle Java Cloud
Oracle Java SE Subscription
Editions & Modules
Standard Edition
$0.15485
Comparison Price (/vCPU)
Enterprise Edition
$0.15485
Comparison Price (/vCPU)
High Performance Edition
$0.3871
Comparison Price (/vCPU)
Oracle Java SE Desktop Subscription
$2.50
per named user per month
Oracle Java SE Subscription
$25
per core per month
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Java Cloud
Oracle Java SE Subscription
Free Trial
No
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
No
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
Yes
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
—
Volume discounts also available.
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Oracle Java Cloud
Oracle Java SE Subscription
Considered Both Products
Java Cloud
No answer on this topic
Oracle Java SE Subscription
Verified User
Analyst
Chose Oracle Java SE Subscription
We [have] worked with Oracle Java SE Subscription for a long time and we have a good relationship with Oracle Java. Most of the clients prefer Oracle Java SE Subscription over any other subscriptions or tools because Oracle Java SE is highly reliable and ease of use [is] also …
We are using Oracle Java SE Subscription for long time till this point we [have] not considered any other product because Oracle Java SE Subscription satisfied all our requirements
We briefly looked into switching to OpenJDK, but the lack of support was too much. We did do some testing with Redhat but to switch everything over to OpenJDK was not worth the testing and effort.