Why is UMS for Java 7 still the default download option?
Why is UMS for Java 7 still the default download option?
Java 7 is EOL as of April 14. Since UMS 5.1.2 came out one day after that, shouldn't UMS for Java 8 now be offered as the default option?
Granted, Java is probably the most insecure (legitimate) piece of software that you can install on your computer anyway even when it's fully up to date (Flash might be worse - and I stress might), but still...
Granted, Java is probably the most insecure (legitimate) piece of software that you can install on your computer anyway even when it's fully up to date (Flash might be worse - and I stress might), but still...
Re: Why is UMS for Java 7 still the default download option?
AFAIK Java 7 is EOL at the end of April so there's still about 2 weeks - there was actually an update posted today that brings security updates to both JRE 7 and 8.
Our default download option will always err on the side of caution so I don't know when it will change to Java 8. In any case there is no advantage to using the Java 8 build of UMS over the Java 7 build, only a slightly smaller filesize. It's not faster, stabler, more secure, or anything else.
Our default download option will always err on the side of caution so I don't know when it will change to Java 8. In any case there is no advantage to using the Java 8 build of UMS over the Java 7 build, only a slightly smaller filesize. It's not faster, stabler, more secure, or anything else.
Re: Why is UMS for Java 7 still the default download option?
My understanding is that is the java browser plugin that is insecure. The JRE itself, which is what runs UMS, is just fine. Thus Java provides a ubiquitous platform independent language on which to build a *universal* media server.