By Steven Chan on October 31, 2006 9:26 AM
Today we'll take a short breather from OpenWorld coverage, since I'm still doggedly plowing through what seems like a terabyte's worth of Powerpoint presentations.
If you're still debating the value of participating in our Early Adopter Program for replacing Oracle's Jinitiator with the native Sun Java plug-in for your E-Business Suite users, here's another possible conflict scenario with Oracle Business Intelligence 10g that's recently been uncovered.
If you have both of the following combinations in your environment:
- E-Business Suite Release 11i configured with Jinitiator 1.3.x
- Discoverer 10g 10.1.2 configured with Sun Java 1.4.x or 1.5.x
Then you may encounter conflicts between the Java Virtual Machines for those two configurations. These conflicts will trigger one or both of the following errors:
- 'Runtime Error! Program: C:Program FilesInternet Exploreriexplore.exe abnormal program termination'
- "Register Failk"
If you run into this situation, Metalink Note 396773.1 lists a number of
possible workarounds. It may also be worth looking into our
Early Adopter Program, as well, to see if that configuration eliminates the conflict in a less-painful manner than the workarounds.
Related
By Steven Chan on October 31, 2006 3:40 PM
Editor Nov 1 Update: Added userid & password to download presentations
The presentations for the OpenWorld 2006 sessions are now available online; get 'em while they're hot.
The
Applications Technology session presentations have a great deal of Release 12 information. I'll be highlighting a few of the most interesting ones in future articles. If you weren't able to join us at this year's conference, these presentations represent the motherlode of R12 sneak previews.
The login information needed to download these presentations is displayed in red at the top of the Content Catalog:
- Username: cboracle
- Password: oraclec6
Keynote speakers have their own
special section, where you can download PDFs of their presentations, watch videos of the full keynotes, or, if you're pressed for time, watch the highly-edited Keynote Highlights (clips of 5 minutes or less).
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