On 26 Jul 2012, at 11:32, "Greeves, Nick" <[email protected]> wrote:
> If you try Mountain Lion and sites with the signed applet you may find you > are unable to enable the applet. > It is new security feature in Mac OS X, by default only apps from Mac Store & > from trusted developers are allowed to run there. Fortunatelly, it is easy to > change, you have to allow this in Mac OS X preferences. > > Go to Preferences -> Security & Privacy and click on padlock to allow changes. > > Then in "Allow appications downloaded from" select "Anywhere". > > After that, the button in Java dialog will be enabled. > Can anyone reproduce this? Although doing the above allows OS X Mountain lion to run signed Jmol from a remote server, trying to run the same from a local hard drive produces the message "You do not have Java applets enabled in your web browser, or your browser is blocking this applet" (which comes from jmol.js). I have tried this on two quite separate Mountain Lion installs with the same result. However, it is specific to Safari; Chrome and Firefox are fine on the same systems (i.e. Java is present). ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Live Security Virtual Conference Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/ _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users

