omeone go about providing donations to
> support the java/linux efforts, in order to perpetuate
> the trend?
>
> Thank you
> respectfully
> dt
>
> _
> David R.Thompson
> Los Alamos National Laboratory
>
that it
> > > passes the tests in the Java Compatibility Kit." Is this a requirement
> > > of Sun's source code licensing, or is it just something that was decided
> > > on by the Blackdown team?
> >
> > It's the dreaded sections 2.4 and 2.5 as amending 2.3 of our license that say
> > we HAVE to pass JCK before we can release or even pre-release.
> >
> > Steve
> >
--
Kirk Hutchinson, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Software Engineer, Cabletron Systems
What good is unused science?
x27;t fixed yet.
Stick with 1.1.7 and you'll be better off until 1.2.1 (or 2.0.1 - if
they can ever get their names straight).
Java will be great if they don't keep screwing it up!
kirk
--
Kirk Hutchinson, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Software Engineer, Cabletron Systems
What good is unused science?
admit to not searching very hard.
Anybody know if projects are available in XEmacs? What about a graphical
representation of the project (ie: tab view of source list, import dirs,
libs, images, etc...)?
kirk
Ryan Sutter wrote:
>
> Kirk Hutchinson wrote:
>
> > First of all, XEmac
der2 product but am a little disappointed in it. Perhaps I'll give the
> Symantec's Visual Cafe a try. Does this product support JDK1.2 with regard
> to using the latest swing components?
>
> Steve Delahunty
> Mullion Communications
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> -Ori
i wrote:
>
> Pierre Bizzotto wrote:
> >
> > Hi, I need an IDE for C and Java, if it's possible for XWINDOWS or KDE.
>
> Use Emacs and JDE, it's best in the long run.
--
Kirk Hutchinson, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Software Engineer, Cabletron Systems
What good is unused science?