On Fri, 13 Jan 2012 10:10:15 +0100, Carl Jokl <[email protected]> wrote:

I guess that the bundling allows things to keep working but it is not
exactly efficient that every Java app has to bundle its own Java with
it. I mean it has been typical for Windows games for example to have
the required version of DirectX bundled with it but this was an
installer so in theory it was installed so every app could use (albeit
it still meant each one has ended up bundling its own copy of it. Not
ideal but I suppose it works.

I suppose if I was a political spin doctor I could argue that there
would be no point asking people to remove Java if so many people
didn't have it installed already. The whole bundling other apps and
having the option checked by default is certainly a genuine pain. I
think the bad feeling generated by this is not worth the revenue
generated. It is not as if Java was the only installer that did this,
Flash was a big culprit too. Every time something tries to bundle
something else with the option checked by default it annoys me.

You're right, but unfortunately for the future we're not going to have options. In Mac OS X bundling will be the only way to be sure, unless you want to manually ask the user to pre-install Java (which also means to make your application installer more complex).


--
Fabrizio Giudici - Java Architect, Project Manager
Tidalwave s.a.s. - "We make Java work. Everywhere."
[email protected]
http://tidalwave.it - http://fabriziogiudici.it

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