Ok - their are two things going on. First viewing a secure https page with a plugin on the page (that is the bit the browser does), second any network connectivity the revlet does - that's not the browsers business but down to the capabilities of the plugin. I was just talking of the former. We'll have to wait till the FAQ to get an idea about the latter - though I've always felt RunRev was shooting itself in the foot by only including https functionality with enterprise editions, and doing the same for the plugin really makes no sense - so I'd be surprised if they prevent anyone from developing plugin based ecommerce solutions.
2009/8/2 Bernard Devlin <[email protected]> > If this is true then it's good news. However, since plugins like > Flash are able to make their own multiple network connections once > they are instantiated, I'd be surprised to learn that plugin network > connections piggy-back on the browser's connection. Since the > revPlugin is visible as an application distinct from the browser in > the running processes of the OS, the plugin is clearly not subsumed > within the browser. _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
