Webstart and applets can use native libs with the <nativelib> element  
in JNLP files.  It's even easier when you use JNLP extensions. I'm  
sure the SWT team has created a standard SWT extension that you can  
simply include in your app's JNLP.

- Josh

On Nov 2, 2009, at 11:30 AM, Mario Camou wrote:

> The big problem I see with SWT is the native parts (DLL, .so, etc),  
> which means that an SWT app can't be easily deployed, for example,  
> through WebStart or as an applet (without having to preinstall  
> shared libs). That is a killer for some range of apps (one of which  
> I'm working on right now). Of course, I could be wrong and would  
> appreciate being corrected.
> -Mario.
>
> --
> I want to change the world but they won't give me the source code.
>
>
> On Sun, Nov 1, 2009 at 15:26, a.efremov <a.efre...@javasmith.org>  
> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> How you feel about SWT and its future in enterprise java on desktop?
> SWT application has native look and feel and integrates seamlessly
> with user's environment. I mean compared to as Swing application does.
>
> will be glad to hear your feedbacks.
>
> alexander
>
>
>
> >


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