= not to worry, Thanks Alkis!
David
On Thu, Mar 9, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Alkis Georgopoulos
wrote:
> Opening a .jnlp file is like opening a .doc file; it doesn't require any
> support from the browser, and it doesn't require any plugins.
> It runs locally and natively inside the OS.
>
> After you op
Opening a .jnlp file is like opening a .doc file; it doesn't require any
support from the browser, and it doesn't require any plugins.
It runs locally and natively inside the OS.
After you open it, you can even close the browser. Or you can get it
with wget. Or you can store it locally and launc
Wow! that was close, almost updated my Firefox this morning. Thanks Alkis.
Now, I just tried the java app in question (ends in .jnlp) on my mac which
has FF v. 52 and get the message "What should Firefox do with this file?"
and I click on "Java Web Start" and it starts! Now this seems to contradic
David yes solutions for this exist for all users, but unfortunately
Firefox 52+ no longer supports Java applets at all, so there's no point
in even translating from a Greek wiki page to English there. :)
https://support.mozilla.org/t5/Problems-with-add-ons-plugins-or/Why-do-Java-Silverlight-Adob
On 2017-03-08 21:52, David Groos wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Using 14.04 ltsp-pnp fat clients. When a student is browsing/loading
> a
> java-based sim such as on
> https://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/energy-forms-and-changes [1]
> the client asks a few things:
>
> * "What should Firefox do with
Hi All,
Using 14.04 ltsp-pnp fat clients. When a student is browsing/loading a
java-based sim such as on
https://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/energy-forms-and-changes the client
asks a few things:
1. "What should Firefox do with this file?" User selects 'open with
IcedTea...'.
2. "You