Thanks, Bernard, for you suggestion; I have been running WINE on various machines for the last 4 years, oddly enough as a way of testing Windows standalones from
Runtime Revolution stacks :)

Also one of my sons was mucking around with some silly free blackjack games for
Windows . . . Yuck!

However . . . the situation in my school is rather different as I deal mainly with 7 -12 year old children who do not have English as a native language, and belong to the "attention-deficit-click-click-I-want-it-now" generation - and the main concern is to stop them performing multiple clicks (because, let's face it, 2 seconds is a lifetime,
isn't it . . . Ha, Ha, Ha) in funny places while something loads.

I am actually working with .swf files, which I, like many others, thought, wrongly, meant that they were Shockwave files (just as, similarly, I thought that .dcr files were Director files !!!!!!). There are quite a few ways to play these files on the slow Pentium IIIs without invoking WINE (which really does hit them); the easiest
and lightest (in terms of RAM consumption) seems to be swfdec-gnome. Adobe
have released a Flash player for Linux, but it is full of needless eye-candy,
only seems to work with Ubuntu 8.04 up (and I run Ubuntu 5.04/5.10 in my
school), only works as a browser plug-in, and so on.

I have a handful of .swf files sitting inside a directory on the desktops and really need that a double click on one of them loads them directly into something that has an absolutely minimal interface (see comments above about the sticky-finger
brigade): swfdec-gnome does exactly that.

Now, my next problem is to see whether I can install swfdec-gnome downstairs
from a .tar file instead of hauling each Pentium box up and down the stairs to connect
to the internet and a bit of aptitude . . .

Runtime Revolution led me "astray" this morning when, possibly rather naively, I imported a .swf file as a video file (well . . . it let me do it) and tried to play it as a videoClip and ended up with a lot of 'spaghetti'. It would be jolly nice if one could
play them like this (think of the mysterious "Hypercard 3" which would have
allowed Hypercard stacks to be played in a Quicktime player and then stand things on their heads). One could leverage the interactivity of .swf inside the interactivity
of Runtime Revolution :)

sincerely, Richmond Mathewson.

Bernard Devlin wrote:
Richmond,

It looks like you might have solved your problem.  However, you may be
pleasantly surprised by Wine.  There may well be circumstances in
which it will provide a good solution.

I run Lotus Notes under Wine on my Linux netbook, which has a
relatively slow processor and only 512mb of RAM.  Yet Notes runs
faster under Wine than on my much faster dual processor Vista laptop
with 1gb of RAM (even with all of Vista's eye candy stripped out and
all unnecessary services stopped).

I realise that the Wine community is not able to tune their code for
every Windows app, and Notes is probably one of those where they have
spent considerable time getting it to work.

But still, I was astonished to see what Wine can do.  Note to self:
remember, Wine is not an emulator.

Bernard

On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 9:17 PM, Richmond Mathewson
<[email protected]> wrote:
However, the Shockwave
Player can be installed
                 on Linux with CrossOver or by running a Windows version of
a supported browser
                in Wine (with varying degrees of success)."

Which sounded really heavy and not at all suitable for my Pentium IIIs. As
well as involving too
much hard work on my part :)

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