Mark J. Stang wrote:
One more time:

http://www.markjstang.com/embeddedxindice.html

Mark,

I notice in this document you say that Xindice has trouble with
JDK 1.4. Is this for JDK1.4 + Xindice 1.1 only, or have you had
trouble with Xindice 1.0?

Reason I ask is that I upgraded to JDK 1.4 (1.4.1_01 on linux)
with Xindice 1.0 and apart from having to fix some deprecated
code in my application, there were no other problems. Now, if
this is something that occurs in Xindice 1.1 and the only
solution is to modify the installed JRE by moving some jar files
into a directory, I can't force this on my users (who will not
even in general know what a JRE is, much less where it is on
their machines), nor can I have my installation do this as I
can't always assume access rights.

It would be a showstopper for my use of 1.1 if I had to modify
my users' JRE using the "Endorsed Standards Override Mechanism".
I'm hoping this is only a temporary problem...  (?)

Other than that, the document looks good. (As a markup person
I'd suggest "element" rather than "tag" if you're talking about
more than just the tag itself -- an SGML element considers the
start and end tag as delimiters of an element, which includes
the tags and all contents) Oh, it'd be easier to read if the
email message at the bottom were wrapped in a <pre>.

Thanks!

Murray

......................................................................
Murray Altheim                  <http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/murray/>
Knowledge Media Institute
The Open University, Milton Keynes, Bucks, MK7 6AA, UK

    "In Las Vegas Mr Gates also demonstrated a prototype
     fridge magnet which can be programmed to receive traffic
     reports, sports results and advertisements from local
     restaurants using the same FM signal as the wristwatch."
                                 -- The Guardian, 10 Jan 2003.



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