Now which do you think is going to be more of a challenge to support?
But yes, they image everything as well and if education is a market for RunRev on the backend, this would work well enough there too.
Maybe we should just get the engine preloaded, or perhaps I don't see why that is any more dangerous than any other engine being installed (.NET, java, etc... they're (in some sense) all very similar))
I did see some information about homestacks being infiltrated by a HyperCard virus, but that seems unlikely to be anymore dangerous than, for example, MS Office or Windows in general.
Yours, Chris On Feb 12, 2004, at 1:37 AM, Alex Rice wrote:
On Feb 12, 2004, at 12:27 AM, Richard Gaskin wrote:
Because unless it's bundled it will still need to be downloaded, and if one
needs to download and install something it could just as well provide
multiple window, menus, and other options not possible in a browser.
Look at the number of plugins in '98, and how few are left today. Bundling
is the advantage of plugins. Without bundling, an engine's an engine....
It's not such a black and white issue.
You are talking about average-joe-consumer out there with Windows 98, and generalizing that to say there is no advantage to browser plugins, period. I disagree.
Look at IT departments that ghost their systems for rollouts. No downloading of plugins required. In fact downloading may not be allowed. In fact- public www access may not even be allowed! Corporations are strange places.
-- Alex Rice | Mindlube Software | http://mindlube.com
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