David Thielen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
My conclusion between the two (now that .NET 2.0 has shipped) is:
Portable - java
Otherwise - .NET. A lot of the .NET advantage comes from the fact that the
entire stack is from Microsoft so it all just works and is easy to use.
Thanks - dave
S'probably
Hello,
I think will have to make amends for my post where I recommended
to consider steering clear of J2EE. Thus deepening the off-topicness.
Jess Holle said it:
This affects things ranging from surveys of developers asking Which of
the following do you use? (a) J2EE, (b) .NET, ... where
This?
http://rfc.net/rfc2268.html
--On Tuesday, February 07, 2006 2:10 PM -0500 Martin Gainty [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Good Afternoon All
I am attempting to locate RFC2268 (RC2) java security providers for J2SDK 1.42
Suggestions???
Thanks,
Martin-
--On Friday, February 17, 2006 2:01 PM -0300 Luis Henrique [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I dont care about the session security.
I just want to associate the broser user with one in my database. For
this a need to get his cert.
You *can* set up HTTPS then drop to NULL encryption :-P To get the
(www.phoex.com) in an applet
So, now the user can choose the cert to send to server. It works on
Windows keystore.
On 2/17/06, David Tonhofer, m-plify S.A. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--On Friday, February 17, 2006 2:01 PM -0300 Luis Henrique [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I dont care about the session