osition squarely centered
over their parents, and I haven't had windows mysteriously being placed
somewhere at position 32767,32767 like - IIRC - I had with KDE and 1.1.7).
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Cees de Groot http://www.cdegroot.com <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
-
ing as a standard or whatever), they'll go full Open Source. At
present, the Blackdown porting effort is mainly a debugging effort and
that could be parallelized very well...
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Cees de Groot http://www.cdegroot.com <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
er running a while on the JDK 1.2
pre-release builds, you probably want to disable the JIT for the RMID (this
could also be due to the fact that I'm running the RMID on my SMP box,
though)..
--
Cees de Groot http://www.cdeg
7;re right with the current 1.2 prerelease ;-)). Native and
green threads make a difference on the Java code level (native threads allow
for sloppy thread coding, green threads don't), so any comparisons must have
these options set the same.
Regards,
Cees
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Cees de Groot htt
Orifice, that you should be able to write
a Java client for ;-}
However, my feeling is that this is completely irrelevant to Java on Linux,
what this mailing list is about.
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Cees de Groot http://www.cdegroo
orking. I did have some problems on my SMP box,
but on my laptop with native threads things seem to be OK (at least,
'ps' indicates some 107 Java procs polluting process table space ;-)).
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Cees de Groot http://www.cdegroot.com <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---
gnome package could be provided
relatively easy on top of this. Maybe even transparent drag-and-drop
integration?
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Cees de Groot http://www.cdegroot.com <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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7;s
still available, but it's client-oriented as far as I can tell.
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RPC, NFS, and NIS to name a few things. Ok, they're a public company
so they have a bloated legal department, but basically I think they're
cool and open-minded about us freeware hackers. You can't say that of
their Redmond counterparts...
(kill -ILL Microsoft Business Practices)
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has beaten TowerJ on some tests...
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>> JDK1.2v3
> ^^
>Is this a typo? If not, where can I get the new version? Upon a cursory
>look, I didn't see it at the mirrors.
>
It's a typo.
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ver processes.
As usual, the only thing that I'm really saying here is YMMV :-)
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with a subj
ame level
as C-based Python.
The adaption was to let the test run longer - apparently, Hotspot is
for long-living server-side processes and needs some time to get to
speed.
All in all, interesting stuff which I hope will be available on Linux
sometime (that, or the IBM JDK...)
--
Cees de Groo
Wes Biggs wrote:
> > All your arguments are factually right. But pyschology is at work here, and
> > especially in an extremely important project like JDK porting (from my
> > perspective, it is the second most important project after the kernel and at
> > times more important), you have to acco
Chris Abbey wrote:
> How so? You're multi-billion dollar international corporation is staking
> it's bottom line on java2 for Linux? You were asssigned a project and sold
> your prof on the idea of doing it on Linux and in Java, but absolutely
> _have_ to have the latest and greatest whiz-bang fe
You should get away by installing the XFree 3.3.3.1 shared libraries somewhere,
and hacking LD_LIBRARY_PATH in the Java wrapper scripts. Note that the
accelleration is done at the server side, not at the client side, so
performance-wise it shouldn't matter much which shared libraries your Java
pro
Nathan Meyers wrote:
> 1) The kernel controls it, or
>
> 2) It's controlled in user space.
>
> Native threads use answer #1, while green threads are the (nearly)
> OS-independent Sun version of answer #2. They have the advantage of
> working, with some porting effort, on OSes that don't support t
Artur Biesiadowski wrote:
> I don't think that signing electronic license would stand in any court.
> With old licensing scheme, you had to sign it on paper and fax/mail it -
> and this oligate you to something, but anybody can click license for me
> - these passwords aren't very secure, are they
Oliver Fels wrote:
> Just for your interest and in case noone has mentioned it yet:
>
> Sun is now making the source code to the Java® 2 platform
> available to the developer community.
>
Yes, but *please* think twice before committing your soul to Sun!
I hope it is clear that the second you ag
oring
the bandwidth just needs to make a small adjustment (allowing you to relay
mail over them) in order to give you breathing space.
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Cees de Groot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Acriter Software http://www.acriter.com
x27;m sure
one
will come along. Hope this answers your question.
Look for RXTX, linked from Blackdown. It's not 100% and I seem to recall
that they had some problems with the latest beta of the Comm API, but I've
had it working on my box..
-- Cees de Groot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]&g
bjjpeg and patched the Java source file that loads it as a
work-around, for example). Putting extra j's in there shouldn't break a
thing and prevents such conflicts.
Regards
Cees
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Cees de Groot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Acriter Consulting http://www.acriter.com
utomatically upgrades
with new software.
It's cleaner to set CLASSPATH in a wrapper script, of course, but often
this only is feasible for a deployment situation. When hacking/developing,
you want to have all stuff at your fingertips.
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Cees de Groot <[EMAIL PROTECTED
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