![]() It's unfortunate, but realistically it's not very different from the LabVIEW can't get away with that (it's probably not going to be Mostly get away with relying on the JRE pre-installed on most systems. Program written in Java came with a different version of the JRE.įortunately Java has settled down a bit since then, and people can Minutes (or more) to download back then, and it seemed like every To what Java users had to go through in the 1990s. If you think about file size compared to the size of drives and typicalīandwidth for network connections, then LabVIEW is doing fine compared These components installed, but that didn't use to be the case. ![]() Depending on your OS version you may or may not already have In other languages like VB need runtime DLLs that happen to be very That happen to come with the OS, so you don't notice. "It may be annoying, but it's not unheard of either. In a more useful vein, here's Adam Kemp's reply on the same subject from Info-LabVIEW: ![]()
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