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Foojay.io, the Friends Of OpenJDK!

Foojay.io, the Friends Of OpenJDK!

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The podcast of foojay.io, a central resource for the Java community’s daily ​information needs, a place for friends of OpenJDK, ​and a community platform for the Java ecosystem​ — bringing together and helping Java professionals everywhere.Foojay.io Educación Política y Gobierno
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  • Update Your JDK, Read More Code, and Talk to Your Users: Interviews From VoxxedDays Amsterdam (#93)
    Apr 11 2026
    In this episode of the Foojay Podcast, we're bringing you something special: a full batch of hallway-track conversations recorded live at VoxxedDays Amsterdam.Fifteen guests, one conference, and one theme that kept coming back, whether we planned it or not: Java has grown up quietly, steadily, and in ways that still surprise people who haven't looked lately. We talked about migrating between versions, new features in the latest Java releases, authorization done right, AI-assisted coding, cryptography, containers, open-source contributions, GDPR data experiments, and, yes, the things people hate about Java but secretly love.I spoke with Ko Turk, who organized this very conference, Johannes Bechberger, Lutske de Leeuw, Aicha Laafia, Marit van Dijk, Adele Carpenter, Patrick Baumgartner, Sohan Maheshwar, Jeroen Egelmeers, Erwin Manders, Alexander Shopov, Maarten Verburg, Arjan Tijms, Joost Kaan, and Stephan Janssen.That's a lot of people. That's a lot of opinions. And somehow, they mostly agree: update your JDK, read your code, and please talk to your actual users.Content00:00 Introduction00:30 Ko Turkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/ko-turk-b271b929/Organizer of VoxxedDays AmsterdamMigrating between Java versions02:25 Johannes Bechbergerhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/johannes-bechberger/Java is boring, and that's why it's brilliantJava 26 test it, but not in productionJFR improvements in the latest versions06:28 Lutske de Leeuwhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/lutske/Volunteer at the conferenceJava is boring, and that's why it's brilliantJava 5 till 26 evolutions10:35 Aicha Laafiahttps://www.linkedin.com/in/aicha-laafia-0266a6126/Lambda stream gatherers in Java 25Simpler and more fun codeUpdate your JDK!16:16 Marit van Dijkhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/maritvandijk/Fun in coding, write Java the playful wayJava evolutions and how writing code has evolvedImportance of code reading with AI-assisted coding22:04 Adele Carpenterhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/adele-carpenter-a988623a/The things I hate about Java, but actually love it27:37 Patrick Baumgartnerhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/patbaumgartner/Organizing VoxxedDays ZurichSpring Boot optimizationUsing Buildpacks to create better containers35:02 Sohan Maheshwarhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/sohanmaheshwar/Authorization, the good wayJWT is a bad idea38:34 Jeroen Egelmeershttps://www.linkedin.com/in/jegelmeers/https://craftingaiprompts.org/documentation/se-framework/craft-frameworkAI, prompt engineering, agentic programmingThe CRAFT Framework: Orchestrating Agentic FlowThe importance of interacting with your end-users43:32 Erwin Mandershttps://www.linkedin.com/in/erwinman/Cryptography, digital signatures, and securing data and messagesComparing Kotlin and Java45:12 Alexander Shopovhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/alshopov/Developer at UberComparing different languages: Java, Python, GoHow Java is modernizing by learning from other languages49:18 Maarten Verburghttps://www.linkedin.com/in/maartenverburg/Using your own GDPR data for fun experimentsComparing early Java with the current statusJava Streams the most important change52:35 Arjan Tijmshttps://www.linkedin.com/in/arjantijms/https://omnifish.ee/Jakarta Faces, Security, Authentication and Authorization, EE,...Jakarta specs are used in SpringHow Java evolved and is still evolvingHow can you contribute to opensource59:55 Joost Kaanhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/joost-kaan/What you can learn at a conference, besides the expected language-related talksAI influences on the developer workContributing to the Java community, AI user group01:03:52 Stephan Janssenhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanjanssen/https://geniebuilder.ai/The importance of the "Hallway Track" where you can chat with like-minded peopleUsing AI-assisted spec-driven codingTalking to your end-user becomes more important than ever01:09:00 Conclusion
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    1 h y 9 m
  • Java 26 Is Here: What's New, What's Gone, and Why It Matters in 2026 (#92)
    Mar 14 2026
    Welcome to another episode of the Foojay Podcast! In this episode, we're talking about Java 26, released on March 17 in the year 26. Again, right on schedule with Java's six-month release cadence.Now, Java 26 is not a Long Term Support (LTS) release; that was Java 25. But don't let that fool you into thinking there's nothing interesting here. This release brings ten JDK Enhancement Proposals (JEPs). They cover everything from performance improvements to long-overdue cleanups. Of those ten JEPS, five are new features, and we also get five preview/incubator features.GuestsSimon Ritterhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/siritter/Loïc Mathieuhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/lo%C3%AFc-mathieu-475b144/Content00:00 Introduction of topic and guests01:35 Differences between Long and Short Term Support05:10 Which Java versions are used by companieshttps://foojay.io/today/foojay-podcast-90-highlights-of-the-java-features-between-lts-21-and-25/07:54 Internal changes and improvements in release 26, highlighting UUIDv7 supporthttps://foojay.io/today/java-26-whats-new/12:02 JEP 500: Prepare to Make Final Mean Final13:24 JEP 526: Lazy Constants (Second Preview)16:12 JEP 517: HTTP/3 for the HTTP Client APIhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP/3https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QUIC18:48 JEP 504: Remove the Applet API20:52 JEP 524: PEM Encodings of Cryptographic Objects (Second Preview)21:59 JEP 516: Ahead-of-Time Object Caching with Any GChttps://openjdk.org/projects/leyden/https://docs.azul.com/prime/analyzing-tuning-warmuphttps://foojay.io/today/faster-java-warmup-crac-versus-readynow/25:30 JEP 522: G1 GC: Improve Throughput by Reducing SynchronizationTrash Talk - Exploring the JVM memory management by Gerrit Grunwald28:04 JEP 525: Structured Concurrency (Sixth Preview)https://openjdk.org/projects/loom/31:09 JEP 529: Vector API (Eleventh Incubator)https://openjdk.org/projects/panama/https://openjdk.org/projects/valhalla/34:59 When do JEPs get selected to be included in a releasehttps://openjdk.org/projects/jdk/26/https://openjdk.org/projects/jdk/27/38:03 JEP 530: Primitive Types in Patterns, instanceof, and switch (Fourth Preview)https://openjdk.org/projects/amber/Java Puzzlers talk by Simon42:14 Do we need "Carrier Classes"?Amber mailing list: Data Oriented Programming, Beyond RecordsJVM Weekly newsletter by Artur Skowroński44:38 What changes does Java need for the AI world?JEP DRAFT 8361105: Code reflection (Incubator)https://openjdk.org/projects/babylon/https://www.tornadovm.org/47:53 Remarkable numeric facts about releases48:30 Conclusion
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    50 m
  • 25 Years of IntelliJ IDEA: The IDE That Grew Up With Java
    Feb 28 2026
    In this Foojay Podcast, we're celebrating a major milestone in Java development history: 25 years of IntelliJ IDEA.Think about it: IntelliJ IDEA launched in 2000, and since then, it has become the go-to IDE for millions of Java developers worldwide. From its revolutionary code completion and refactoring tools to AI-powered features and the recent unified Community and Ultimate release, IntelliJ has shaped how we write Java, and keeps reinventing itself to stay ahead.For this episode, I'm joined by three people from the JetBrains team who know this story inside and out. Marit van Dijk, developer advocate and contributor to the Foojay community. Anton Arhipov, also a developer advocate at JetBrains. And Dmitry Jemerov, who has been part of the IntelliJ IDEA story for a very long time.GuestsMarit van Dijkhttps://foojay.io/today/author/marit-van-dijk/https://www.linkedin.com/in/maritvandijk/https://mastodon.social/@maritvandijkAnton Arhipovhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/antonarhipov/Dmitry Jemerovhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/dmitry-jemerov-3a59b43a5/LinksWebsiteDocumentationBlogYouTubeLinkedInBlueskyTwitterFoojay Podcast #81: Maven 4 – The Future of Java Build AutomationVideo: IntelliJ IDEA: The Documentary | [OFFICIAL TRAILER] | Coming March 5thIntroducing Mellum: JetBrains’ New LLM Built for Developers Mellum: Explore code-intelligent large language models for IDEs, AI assistants, research, and educationBirthday game websiteGame plugin in IntelliJ IDEAYou’re Invited to IntelliJ IDEA Conf 2025!The Unified IntelliJ IDEA: More Free Features, a Better Experience, Smoother FlowVideo: Troubleshooting Spring Boot Applications with the Spring DebuggerSpring Debugger pluginPlugin for IntelliJ IDEA (and other IDEs) created by Frank: Recent Projects OrganizedContent00:00 Introduction of topic and guests01:36 Now JetBrains started02:31 Licensed software in an open-source world06:37 Other JetBrains IDEs07:46 Why Kotlin was created08:50 The challenge of maintaining all the tools10:36 How the guests joined JetBrains14:03 IntelliJ versus IntelliJ IDEA, history of the name15:10 Most important ongoing changes in IDEs17:55 Unified distribution of IntelliJ IDEA and the history of the open-source version21:28 The number of people at JetBrains23:31 the "business model" behind Kotlin24:39 The impact of AI, LLM, Chat interfaces,...35:49 Upcoming evolutions in IntelliJ IDEA38:07 About shortcuts and the many features and plugins in IntelliJ IDEA46:36 Announcements: IntelliJ IDEA Conf 2026 and Documentary Trailer48:35 The IntelliJ IDEA Birthday Game49:24 Conclusions
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    50 m
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