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After talking with a coworker about Sun and IBM's recent (failed?) attempt at a merger, we started wondering...how does (or did) Sun ever make money on Java anyway? I know they make money with their other services/products/research etc, but Java has always been no-cost, correct? Since I use Java almost exclusively, it's a relevant question for me. And on a side note, what would happen to the incredibly popular language if Sun happened to go under?

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For your last question, see stackoverflow.com/questions/663650/…. – mmyers Apr 8 at 15:04
Specifically, this answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/663650/… – mmyers Apr 8 at 15:05
Please make this a Community Wiki. – Mihai Limbasan Apr 8 at 15:08
It helps Sun sell hardware, which is where it makes most of its money. – Peter Lawrey Apr 9 at 19:56

closed as not programming related by Adam Davis, cletus, Robert S., Mihai Limbasan, Terrapin Apr 8 at 15:08

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  • royalties on hardware using java (mobile phones, smart cards, ...)

  • certifications for developpers

  • certifications so application servers are guarranteed to be conforme to J2EE

  • consulting

  • support

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Your question made me think of this quote:

Consulting:
If you aren't part of the solution, there's a lot of money to be made prolonging the problem.

Sun sells Java support and services to large companies. As the primary source and resource for Java, it is in the interest of large companies to keep their fingers in Sun's pie so they can have their development problems resolved quickly, and can, to some degree, affect the development path of Java. One of the reasons Java has so many 'enterprise' features is because that one of the things Sun is being paid to provide.

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Is that from despair.com? If it isn't, it should be. – mmyers Apr 8 at 15:06
They have a poster for it: despair.com/consulting.html but the saying goes back a long time... – Adam Davis Apr 8 at 15:09
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Sun sales servers, their support and consulting services.

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