On 21/04/2018 22:43, Keith N. McKenna wrote:
On 4/21/2018 10:00 AM, Peter Kovacs wrote:
As I pointed out that we move the core java functionality to be Java 9
compatible.
Also a 64 bit Windows migration is on the way.
Plus we move to MSVC 2015. Should therefore close the gaps you have in mind
On 4/21/2018 10:00 AM, Peter Kovacs wrote:
> As I pointed out that we move the core java functionality to be Java 9
> compatible.
> Also a 64 bit Windows migration is on the way.
> Plus we move to MSVC 2015. Should therefore close the gaps you have in mind
> for 4.2.0.
>
> I don't think that
On Sat, Apr 21, 2018, 6:36 AM Pedro Lino wrote:
>
> People reading something, jumping to conclusions, and freaking out. Move
> along, nothing to see here...
>
>
> I don't think so. Maybe there is a good reason why another office suite
> moved all the scripting to Python.
As I pointed out that we move the core java functionality to be Java 9
compatible.
Also a 64 bit Windows migration is on the way.
Plus we move to MSVC 2015. Should therefore close the gaps you have in mind for
4.2.0.
I don't think that java license for cooperation is an issue.
Am 21. April
> People reading something, jumping to conclusions, and freaking out. Move
> along, nothing to see here...
>
I don't think so. Maybe there is a good reason why another office suite moved
all the scripting to Python.
> Facts: there are OpenJDK builds for Windows, Linux, Mac and even
On 04/20/2018 07:06 PM, Fernando Cassia wrote:
> People reading something, jumping to conclusions, and freaking out. Move
> along, nothing to see here...
Given the Appeals Court ruling of 2018-03-27, corporations have reason
to be extremely cautious about their use of JAVA.
Not just JAVA, but
On Fri, Apr 20, 2018, 11:27 AM Pedro Lino wrote:
> Hi all
>
> If I understand the notice correctly this will not be a problem for
> personal use at home but all OpenOffice features requiring Java can not be
> used within a company unless the company buys a Java license...
> It sounds quite confusing. I think it refers to the point that java 8 will
> drop out of support 2020.
>
> Damjan is already get our code Java 9 ready. So 4.2.0 will have Java 9
> support.
According to this page
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/eol-135779.html
Java 9 is already dead
It sounds quite confusing. I think it refers to the point that java 8 will drop
out of support 2020.
Damjan is already get our code Java 9 ready. So 4.2.0 will have Java 9 support.
Am 20. April 2018 17:55:24 MESZ schrieb Phillip Rhodes
:
>I read that as only
I read that as only referring to the Java 8 SE binaries specifically.
If I'm reading this right, users using a Java 9 or Java 10 SDK will
still be fine. That just means we have an onus on us to make sure
things work with the latest versions of the SDK.
Phil
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Hi all
I just updated Java 8 and got a notification saying
"You have successfully installed Java.
Important Information about Oracle Java SE Roadmap:
Changes are coming which will impact your access to future releases of
Java SE from Oracle. Corporate users will be impacted as soon as
January
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