| JavaWorld | | | Ted Neward has been writing code for 20 years. He's coded for dozens of Fortune 500 companies. He's architected platforms used to build software and services for thousands of users and customers. And he still hates programming tests. | | | Issue highlights 1. Proof-of-concept available for Android vulnerability 2. Oracle switches Berkeley DB license 3. Oracle Enterprise Manager 12c gears up for the private cloud | | White Paper: VMware Think that your business is safe from an IT outage caused by a natural or man-made disaster? Think again. Read this trend brief to learn more about potential risks to IT services and how a comprehensive disaster recovery plan is essential to keeping your systems up and running at all times. Read Now! | | Technical details and a proof-of-concept exploit have been published for a recently announced Android vulnerability that potentially affects millions of devices and allows attackers to turn legitimate apps into Trojan programs. READ MORE | | On June 10, as part of a low-key release of Berkeley DB, Oracle quietly changed the license of this important embedded database library, widely used as a key-value store within other applications. READ MORE | | The latest release of Oracle Enterprise Manager is packed with new tools to help organizations set up their own private clouds, potentially using Oracle systems, software and even non-Oracle products for PaaS. READ MORE | | | | |