I have had a look at Safari preview 32.  In the preferences/security tab, the 
current production safari has settings for

1. Allow WebGL
2. Allow Internet Plugins,  and in this latter one can configure to allow  Java.

In Safari 32, both of these are now gone.   With  High Sierra developer preview 
about to be released into  beta, may bring confirmation that  Safari too has 
now not merely been deprecated but disallowed. 

If correct, this means that Jmol.jar can only now run in application mode, and 
not as a browser plugin. 

Still,  Apple promise that the new Safari will be  “faster”, although  I 
suspect it has some way to go to be as fast as compiled Java. 


I wonder what the missing  WebGL means? It never really took off did it!

Henry

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