Hi Ronald, I’ve just started playing around with Freenet on OS X. It works fine for me so far if you use the defaults.
Install the JDK (not the JRE) and install the Freenet jar file (not the web install). Should work fine. I use terminal to start and stop freenet as needed. The current indicator applet is being updated by the dev. I assume the error you are getting is because the JRE doesn’t update the java path and something you have installed is looking for the path and the default OS X setting is to give you that pop up. I suggest you remove the remove the JRE and use the JDK. Hope that helps. — Eric Chadbourne http://Nonprofit-CRM.org/ > On Mar 27, 2015, at 2:33 PM, Dsoslglece <sirapo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Le 27/03/2015 17:50, ronald williams a écrit : >> I assume you tech support for freeness? I have a problem that maybe you >> can help with, running a Mac OSX 10.10.2 confirmed install of Java 40 , >> when attempting to open freenet a message appears can not connect to server >> 127.0.0.1 8888 Any suggestions? Thanks >> > Well, this is exactly doing the same to me, for quite a few months, saying > it'll stop someday if no java update is made… just waiting to see if maybe > it's a misreadding of freenet, since being also on Yosemite, Apple makes > automatically the java updates and I've got the latest : java 8 rev 40 > _______________________________________________ > Support mailing list > Support@freenetproject.org > http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.freenet.support > Unsubscribe at http://emu.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support > Or mailto:support-requ...@freenetproject.org?subject=unsubscribe _______________________________________________ Support mailing list Support@freenetproject.org http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.freenet.support Unsubscribe at http://emu.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support Or mailto:support-requ...@freenetproject.org?subject=unsubscribe