If there are any problems with Java in general, let me know
I had to supply my Country/City - but now it works...
I like Java, too, actually. I like it even more now that we're requiring our students to install Sun Java when they come into our program.
Hi,
Actually, I'm getting to hate Java more every day supporting a course management system and a web conferencing system that depends extensively on Java.
It's not so much Java itself but the lousy installers developed by Sun and some developers writing for a very specific version of Java.
Every time a new version of the Sun Java plugin comes out, the installer does not detect an old version and asks about removing it but just installs a new version along with the old one. We have had constant nagging little issues when a system has multiple versions of the Java plugin. Once we rip out all the old plugins, the problems usually go away. It's all the "hand holding" hassles of helping students clean up the mess left by the Sun Java installer. Sun should take a lesson from Macromedia with their Flash plugin installer.
The other problem is Java developers who write to a specific version ofJava. So we are sometimes stuck having to support two or more versions of Java on one system and it's back the first issue of conflicts between Java versions. If we have both Microsoft VM and Sun Java on an older Windows system, even more excitement.
Personally, I hope Martin never allows Java to become part of the Moodle core.
My 2 cents...
Bob
Geolocation service | Java |
Didn't work at all from home. | Agree with Bob. Having been caught out by not having not quite the right version of Java on a machine and having read hundereds (yes!) of posts on the Toolbook list about Java problems I'd be delighted if Martin keeps away from Java. I've never had a problem with compatibilty when using Moodle. Toolbook list - have a look now, I'm confident you'll find some "Java issues" thread pretty easily. |
Ray
(where am I?)
Java for a light and flexible server application like Moodle, no way.
Java applets for interactivity on a web page? Rarely is it better than Flash.
The portable Java Virtual Macine (JVM) combined with JDBC database and public key infrastructure allows the concentration on key competencies to address world class benefits.
Java offers the ability to synergise the paradigm shifing capabilities of EJB/JSP technologies combined with distributed fallback replication. Organisations can go forward to enhance shareholder value in a customer focused and IP leveraged, forward looking posture.
The write once/run anywhere portability of the JVM means that your bytecode can execute on any delivery platform from the multi-cpu paralell sparcstation to the pico-java phone or pda platform in an on-demand world.
Java: enhancing resumes daily
LOL - I shall call myself that from now on.
(I had to have that particular insult explained in slow word by word detail before I understood it)
Interestingly a little bird told me that the sale of PHP books is on the climb and the sales of Java books is static or declining. Will now go back to writing my latest Java book....
Didn't work at all for me from home, will try at work 2morrow, to see if java version is causing the problem..
Excellent feature... I must say.
Am I missing something? Where in Moodle does it need to know the geographic location of IP addresses? And what system is currently used for this? (edit: did a search and found out the answers for myself. You learn something new every day!)
Regarding the demo, the system returned nothing when I went to look at the Choice but this was a deceptively poor showing as when I clicked through to hostip.info it got the country at least correct, though it just guessed at the town/city.
This seems to be happening to others as I note the results are one third 'exactly right' and two thirds 'Could not locate my IP address at all'.
Will this work also with browsers which are older than Netscape 6 and IE 5.5? I tested with Mozilla 1.7.2.
Teemu
Petr was hinting this could have a place in the 1.4.3 release. It seems to me you are still very much experimenting with it. On the other hand, it's had a couple of weeks of use.
I note that it adds a Java requirement for the client that wasn't there before.