As used by VEC a few years ago, they ran a Linux based kiosk machine. I
think VEC may have had them built. I'm speculating, but I doubt the code I
had anything to do with would be permitted to run on hardware unapproved by
Scytl. So it was remote online voting, not Intermet voting.

On Tuesday, 1 April 2014, Jan Whitaker <[email protected]> wrote:

>  At 12:06 PM 1/04/2014, Christopher Vance wrote:
>
> The Scytl code is written in Java. When I worked on it, the VEC
> implementation was using Red Hat Linux and Oracle.
>
>
> Yay, someone with at least some knowledge!
>
> Chris, does this mean the user must have Java installed on their computer?
> I can see this being a security and voter support nightmare.
>
> Jan
>
>
>  Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
> [email protected]<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>
>
> Sooner or later, I hate to break it to you, you're gonna die, so how do
> you fill in the space between here and there? It's yours. Seize your space.
> ~Margaret Atwood, writer
>
> _ __________________ _
>


-- 
Christopher Vance
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