Multimedia components and proprietary programs

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The New Java

To use Java applications, you need a Java Runtime Environment (JRE). Ubuntu does not provide Oracle's proprietary Java version anymore – only the free OpenJDK. Because some Java programs had problems in the past with OpenJDK, many users often resorted to the proprietary Java (sun-java ). But, that's missing now because Oracle put it under a non-free license. Because the proprietary Java is compatible with OpenJDK 8 – the official Java reference – most Java programs should be able to make do with the free Java. You can install the software from the openjdk-8-jdk and icedtea-8-plugin packages, and the older version from openjdk-7-jdk and icedtea-7-plugin via the following command:

$ sudo update-alternatives --config java

This step activates one of the parallel installed Java versions. If an app refuses to run, it's best to submit a bug report at the Ubuntu wiki [8].

Seek and You Shall Find

You can install many proprietary apps and multimedia codecs from the existing repositories. Numerous proprietary Windows programs also run in the Wine Windows-compatible environment [9]. Other than that, take a look in the Ubuntu package manager, because almost any application has a free alternative.

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