Kay Wiebold wrote: > > I tried your workaround. I didn't work. But, no > worries. I will start a new Ubuntu 6.06 setup reusing > the current /home/ directory again. But not today :D > > sun-java5-bin (installed) > sun-java5-jre (installed) > > j2re1.4 (not installed) > j2sdk1.4 (not installed) > > and still 1.4.2 listed. > > $ java -version > java version "1.4.2" > gij (GNU libgcj) version 4.1.0 (Ubuntu 4.1.0-1ubuntu8) > > Copyright (C) 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc. > This is free software; see the source for copying > conditions. There is NO > warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR > A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. > > Still a non-techie question. What's about?
XMLmind XML Editor cannot run with ``GNU java'', only with Sun (and Apple's on Mac OS X) Java. You may have installed Sun Java, but you still have ``GNU java'' in your $PATH. More information: * FAQ: I cannot start XXE on Debian (Ubuntu, Fedora, etc) Linux. Any hints? -- http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/faq.html#xxe_on_debian * Install on Linux (or manual install on the Mac) -- http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/_distrib/doc/user/install.html#d0e125 Hope you don't think every Linux user has as much troubles with XMLmind XML Editor as you have. This is fortunately not the case. (If this was the case, we would give up Linux support. Not kidding.) > libjessie-java > > free implementation of the Java Secure Sockets > Extension (JSSE) > Jessie is a free implementation of the Java Secure > Sockets Extension, > the JSSE, a standard API for Secure Socket Layer (SSL) > network sockets. > The JSSE, aiming for compliance and compatibility with > the > JSSE as it exists in Java 1.4. It includes > 1) A cleanroom implementation of the JSSE API. > 2) Implementations of the SSLv3 and TLSv1 protocols. > > Homepage: <http://www.nongnu.org/jessie/>. I don't know what is this library, nor why it is needed for.

