When it comes to authorizing their applet to run, it says Other instructions in the Transaction Guard Install Help window are also wrong. For reference seeĪlso, "Java" and "applet" are two words, not one, but we all make typos ![]() How can Trend Micro make a mistake like this?Īnother mistake in the sentence is that the word "applet" is not capitalized. ![]() How can Java programmers not know the conditions needed to run the applet they programmed? And if you're not sure, it's pretty easy to verify (or in this case disprove). ![]() The installation of a Java applet does not require administrator privileges. Just days after describing how a restricted mode Web browser can run Java applets, I run into the warning below, issued when Transaction Guard starts to download and run a Java applet from within Firefox. It consistently fails with the "network connection not available" error shown below. Since writing the last posting, I have tried to use Transaction Guard many times from threeĭifferent Windows XP machines over the space of two days. Transaction Guard was only used to illustrate a point, the reference was not an endorsement of the product, which I have hardly any experience with. In my last posting about DropMyRights, I used the Trend Micro Transaction Guard utility as an example of a Java applet installing software while running inside a restricted instance of Firefox.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |