TimesTen 7.0.5 end of life

Hello,
what is the end of life date for supporting TimesTen 7.0.5 ?

Please refer to his document:
http://www.oracle.com/us/support/library/lifetime-support-technology-069183.pdf
7.0 Extended support ends Feb 2015. Sustaining support is indefinite.

Similar Messages

  • Has Adobe Acrobat 8.0 Standard Edition Reached It's End-Of-Life for Updates?

    I am trying to reinstall Adobe Acrobat 8.0 and can't seem to get updates online?  Am I doing something wrong or has the product reached it's End-of-Life?

    CPAGeek you can download the applicable updates at Product updates.

  • Need Acrobat Distiller but it is end of life, need a replacement product to run on windows 2012

    Need Acrobat Distiller but it is end of life, need a replacement product to run on windows 2012.  I have one software application 'Transform' that only needs to convert files to pdf and email to users.
    Which Adobe product runs on windows 2012 that will replace Distiller?

    Distiller is one of the programs available in the Acrobat Suite of programs. You must have an older version if it is at end of life. Do you have Distiller or Distiller Server. Distiller Server has been replaced by a LiveCycle Server product.

  • I support a very large school district currently running Firefox 3.6. What will happen at end of life date? We're in the middle of online testing this week.

    I run the test center for a very large school district with over 120k students. We've got a current deployed base of 54k client machines using Firefox 3.6. We haven't upgraded due to multiple reasons, the most important of which is removing the possibility of using In Private Browsing from the students, and dealing with plugin-updates for the non digital natives (read dumber than a bag of hammers users) that make up the majority of the client base.
    We're testing ESR now, but just found out that end of life for 3.6 is tomorrow, 4/24. We are currently in the middle of statewide online testing. The question is, what will happen tomorrow when the browser goes end of life. The ESR wiki mentions that "an update to the current version of Desktop Firefox will be offered through the Application Update Service"
    So the main question is, are my students/teachers going to get a popup telling them they have to update the browser if we have the updates already turned off? If so, can I turn it off remotely using SCCM, because it will cause all kinds of havoc.
    Please advise asap, and thanks in advance.

    We had to do some serious gymnastics to remove at least most of the ability to use IPB. We removed it from the gui, but unfortunately, if they know the hotkey, they can still bring it up. Security has some serious headaches with this, as by law they have to be able to track where students go, and going with private browsing removes their ability to do forensic work they're required to be able to do. Not a very well thought out feature from Mozilla in my opinion, but it is what it is. Successive versions have made it even more difficult to remove even the gui portion.
    We do plan to release ESR due to the aforementioned security issues, but testing has been slow.
    But thanks for the reply. I think we can turn off the updates if it isn't already done.

  • Link does not work for-End-of-Sale and End-of-Life Announcement for the Cisco Secure Access Control System 5.4

    Link does not work for
    End-of-Sale and End-of-Life Announcement for the Cisco Secure Access Control System 5.4
    How do we get Cisco to fix?
    see attachment

    Give it a couple of days - it looks like they just sent out the notification before the notice was published on the public page.
    Once the ACS 5.4 EoS/EoL notice is published you should see it linked from this page.

  • Request for a page *explicitly*, and in text, stating ESR 10x End of Life - please create one - thanks!

    Please create a page/wiki-entry/blog-post/whatever explicitly stating End of Life for ESR 10x branch.

    The 10.0.12esr is no longer listed on http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/organizations/all (used to be more on bottom with 17.0.2esr on top then) since it is EOL.
    https://blog.mozilla.org/meeting-notes/archives/1261 (January 10, 2013)
    Firefox 10.0.12esr (our final planned 10-series ESR) and Firefox 17.0.2esr were both released yesterday

  • When is end-of-life of WLS 4.5.1?

    When is end-of-life of WLS 4.5.1?
    Cheers,
    Ivan

    This has not been yet announced. Typically, we announce the end of life of
    products at least twelve months before they are retired.
    Thanks,
    Michael
    Michael Girdley, BEA Systems Inc
    ** Learning WebLogic? Buy the book.
    http://www.learnweblogic.com/ **
    "Ivan N. Zhidov" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]..
    When is end-of-life of WLS 4.5.1?
    Cheers,
    Ivan

  • 6.2 64bit windows end of life

    What is the end of life (mainstream maintenance) for 6.2 64bit windows?

    Hi Jeff,
    If you check the more information tab in the PAM matrix for WebAS 6.20, you will find the following information.
    +Installing the Java Add-In for SAP Web AS 6.40 in SAP Web AS 6.20
    Releases 6.30 and 6.40 introduced a lot of radical changes to the Java part of the SAP Web Application Server. For example, the clustering architecture was completely overhauled and remodeled using the concepts that had proved successful on the ABAP side. With SAP Web AS Java 6.30, the supported J2EE standards switched to the popular version J2EE 1.3; at the same time, the former Java development environment was replaced by the SAP NetWeaver Developer Studio, which is integrated with the open-source platform Eclipse.
    SAP Web AS Java 6.20 will not be maintained beyond 2006
    Another important consideration was Sun’s decision to only maintain the Java Development Kit (JDK) 1.3 until the end of 2006. SAP Web AS Java 6.20 is invariably tied to this JDK, and therefore SAP will not be able to maintain SAP Web AS Java 6.20 beyond this point. Since the support for SAP Web AS 6.20 must - and will - continue until 2009 according to SAP’s general maintenance strategy, we needed to find a replacement for the Java part of this version of SAP Web AS.
    We recommend using SAP Web AS Java 6.40 with SAP Web AS ABAP 6.20
    For of all these reasons, we want to enable customers to upgrade from SAP Web AS Java 6.20 to SAP Web AS Java 6.40 as soon as possible. Therefore, we have decided to support combined installations of SAP Web AS ABAP 6.20 and SAP Web AS Java 6.40 as of January 2006. Consequently, we provide a new set of installation CDs/DVDs for customers who want to insert the “J2EE Add-In” into existing ABAP-only installations SAP Web AS 6.20: These CDs/DVDs are now based on SAP Web AS Java 6.40. You can download them from the Software Distribution Center at:
    &#1048707; http://service.sap.com/swdc &#1048774; Download &#1048774; Installations and Upgrades &#1048774; Entry by Application Group &#1048774; SAP NetWeaver &#1048774; SAP NetWeaver Components ( < SAP NW 04 ) &#1048774; SAP WEB AS
    The installation requires that you have done the following:
    &#1048707; Installed the downward-compatible kernel for SAP Web AS 6.40 as described in SAP Note 664679,
    &#1048707; Installed all hot packages up to number 41, and
    &#1048707; Upgraded your database to a recent version (the minimum version is 7.5.0.18 for MaxDB, 9.2.0.3 for Oracle, and V8 Fixpak 7b for DB6).
    The procedure for installing the J2EE Add-in is described in the "Installation Guide - SAP Web AS Java 6.40 SR1”. You will find the version for your database and operating system at:
    &#1048707; http://service.sap.com/instguidesnw04 &#1048774; Installation &#1048774; SAP Web AS SAP Web AS 6.40 SR1 and Related Documentation
    For official information about this change, as well as the latest instructions on how to proceed with the installation, you can also refer to SAP Note 914486.+

  • SendNow  reached end of life - how to install Adobe Send in Outlook?

    I received a msg that SendNow had reached end of life. I removed it from outlook and want to replace it with Adobe Send... how do I install Adobe Send in my outlook?  I can access it on-line with my current account just fine, but I really liked the ease of access with having it right in Outlook when needing to send large files.

    Hi tammyb_wise,
    You can download the plug-in from this page: Send Large Files Online - Share, Control, Track & Manage | Adobe Send
    If you have any trouble installing it, please let us know.
    Best,
    Sara

  • VFM (Virtual File Manager): End of life and replacement products

    In our organization, we are heavy users of VFM (Virtual File Manager) for DFS management and file replication.  Unfortunately VFM is going end of life in Nov 2012 and we have not been able to find suitable product(s) to replace its functionality.We have looked at many alternate products, including Autovirt and ScriptLogic SecureCopy for DFS management and file migration/replication and have not found a suitable replacement so-far.  The products we have seen so-far do not scale well for larger environments and do not provide the ability to import or batch create tasks.  For the DFS management functionality, it looks like Netapp may be able to create a custom tool for us, but we have not found anything suitable from the replication/migration side of things.  Either way, off the shelf products would be preferable to a custom made tool if available.Here is a breakdown of the VFM features that we use and their importance to our teams:Feature UsedFeature TypeFeature DescriptionImportanceAvailability PoliciesAdmin View, Namespace PoliciesDFS Link replicationHigh, used to replicate DFS namespace between serversBackup PoliciesAdmin View, Namespace PoliciesBackup DFS namespaceHigh, used for contingencyClient Recovery PoliciesAdmin View, Business Continuity PolicyAlllows failover of DFS links from PROD to DRHigh, used for BCP / DRCreation PoliciesAdmin View, Namespace PoliciesFiler recovery policies Admin View, Business Continuity PolicyDFS link managementVery, currently used for contingencyMigration PoliciesAdmin View, Data Movement PolicyData copy/ migrationHigh, many migrationsReplication PoliciesAdmin View, Data Movement PolicyServer recovery policiesAdmin View, Business Continuity PolicyDFS link managementVery, currently used for contingencyVFM GUILogical View, add linksDFS link addition / update / deleteVery, used to manage all links
    We are looking for suggestions for replacement products for the functionality of VFM.  Has anyone identified a successor for VFM that would still work within larger environments?  Any suggestions would be appreciated.

    You can get the same functionality that was provided by this product if you take a slightly different approach by using symlinks or CIFS widelinks.  I've been using a script I wrote which effectively replaced what we were doing in Netapp VFM. I create symlinks in the main share that I consider to be the primary tier of storage. The symlinks are to the folders residing on secondary SATA tiers of storage. This script parses through the secondary tier, then adds said symlink into the main tier. To enable this you basically change the options in your share to allow external shares to be traversed (though, it's on the same storage system itself). Create a hidden clone share for the primary tier and change the option on that share to not follow external links/only allow internal. That share will then show the secondary tier folders as 0 byte files that are the shortcuts, you can literally manage those by deleting those files, or using the remove-nafile command in the PowerShell toolkit. This is 7-mode still, but you could do this approach all the same w/ cifs widelinks. This script itself only parses and creates the symlinks that point to secondary tiers of storage, it isn't doing any data migration. You could very easily integrate it into a data migration workflow where you scanned your main tier for folders that have files that haven't been modified in say a year, then auto move those to the SATA tier, then run this script. You could go one step further and auto move them back to primary if you detect your SATA share were in use again, just delete the symlink shortcut and migrate back to primary by doing a standard copy from the one share to other. In addition, this in my opinion is better than using a DFS shortcut for reach folder on each tier of storage whereever it was (like NetApp/Brocade VFM did). Essentially the client was handling linking the shortcuts. This moves the responsibility to the server building and presenting the share and the client knows no different. On a Mac system, this makes a HUGE difference as it is only seeing one DFS pointer in this approach. You can download it here: https://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/scriptcenter/NetApp-symlink-generator-e1de2185

  • Acrobat DC products - End of Life

    Can anyone tell me what the projected End of Life for the DC products will be? I am unable to purchase the new Acrobat DC products until I can prove the length of support that is available from Adobe. I tried to point them to the different service plans that we could get upon purchase, but what my approval folks really want to know is what is the End of Life of the products. I tried to ask via Chat but they could not help me.

    Hi lisaw1111,
    I can understand you concern & will guide you in the right direction.
    Adobe Acrobat support for any particular version ends with the release of two forward versions. For Example Adobe will ended the support for Acrobat X soon as Acrobat DC has been launched.
    Similarly Adobe will end the Support for Acrobat DC with the launch of two forward versions & there is no estimated time of launch for next version of Acrobat, so its quite difficult to project the End of Life of the product.
    I hope this information will be of some help.
    In case if you have any further query please let us know. We will be happy to assist you.
    Regards,
    Aadesh

  • [Zen Micro] Road map for firmware 1.x / end of life

    Hi all,
    does anyone (hint, hint, moderators) know what's the supposed road map for the Micro firmwares. Ok, I know that Creative doesn't comment on the functionalities and releases .
    But my essential question is this:
    <FONT color=#cc0000>Is the firmware .x (driver-based, with MediaSource support) end of life, or will it continue to be developed? Will all new, generic features of the 2.x (PlayForSure...) line also be integrated in a continuing .x line of firmware? Or not?
    I found out in <A target=_blank href="http://forums.creative.com/creativelabs/board/message?board.id=dap&message.id=9892">this thread about firmware 2.x[/url] that the new 2.x beta firmware has new features, not being promoted on the download site (or forum). For the moment, I prefer MediaSource over WMP to manage my collection, and for that reason I want to stick with .x firmware.
    <A target=_blank href="http://forums.creative.com/creativelabs/board/message?board.id=dap&message.id=9892">[/url]I really expect a customer-oriented company (and I recently filled in a Creative survey on quality of support services after getting an invitation email, so they do suggest they care) to share a roadmap - even for just some months - with their users.
    Thanks.

    Creative very rarely share this kind of information, so I think it unlikely they will.

  • FrameMaker for the Mac End-of-Life (No more development)

    From Dov Isaacs, and Adobe employee and all-round guru, to the Framers list (http://www.frameusers.com):
    ~ Adobe FrameMaker End-of-Life for Macintosh Platform ~
    On April 21, 2004 Adobe will discontinue Adobe(r) FrameMaker(r) software for the Apple Macintosh operating system. Adobe FrameMaker 7.1 will continue to be available on Microsoft(r) Windows(r) and Sun(tm) Solaris(tm) platforms. Complimentary and fee-based technical support for FrameMaker for Macintosh will be available for approximately one year running through April 21, 2005.
    Frequently Asked Questions
    Q. Why is Adobe discontinuing Macintosh support for FrameMaker altogether?
    A. The decision to discontinue FrameMaker on the Macintosh operating systems was based on the market conditions for FrameMaker. The majority of our customers use FrameMaker on Microsoft Windows and Sun Solaris platforms.
    Adobe is continuing Macintosh development for flagship print and web publishing solutions such as Adobe Creative Suite including InDesign(r) CS, Photoshop(r) CS, Illustrator(r) CS, GoLive(r) CS, and Acrobat(r).
    Q. How much of your FrameMaker base is currently using Macintosh?
    A. It is our policy to not comment on the size of our user base. However, sales of FrameMaker licenses have been greater on the Window sand Solaris platforms for a number of years.
    Q. How much longer will FrameMaker 7.0 for Macintosh be available?
    A. Adobe FrameMaker 7.0 for Macintosh will be available to distributors and licensing customers and through the Adobe Store, until April 21, 2004.
    Q. Will Adobe release another version of FrameMaker for Solaris and Windows?
    A. Its our policy not to disclose future product plans but moving forward, Adobe's planned development efforts for FrameMaker will focus on the Windows and Solaris platforms.
    Q. Will Macintosh users continue to get support from Adobe on FrameMaker?
    A. Adobe will continue to provide complimentary support for FrameMaker 7.0 for Macintosh until April 21, 2005, approximately one year. Adobe will honor fee-based technical support contracts for the Mac version until they expire. Adobe Open Option (AOO) maintenance contracts can no longer be ordered. For North America customers, please contact Adobe Customer Service at (800) 833-6687. For customers in other regions, please visit
    to contact your local customer service team.

    This document will explain the different support options you have:
    http://www.oracle.com/support/library/data-sheet/oracle-lifetime-support-policy-datasheet.pdf

  • End of life of the 1155 Platform

    The possible details on Intel's next generation processors for desktop are published on the internet. A Chinese website published the probable names and specifications of the new Core processors, codenamed Haswell.
    Intel would initially release fourteen Haswell processors, including six with a standard operating voltage and TDP of 84W and eight more economical variants with TDP of 65W, 45W and 35W. Among the Haswell processors with standard operating voltage are two K processors, with freely adjustable multiplier. The default clock speeds range from 3GHz to 3.5GHz and all six processors have four cores, but only the two Core i7's have HyperThreading and 8MB cache instead of 6MB.
    The economical variants have clock speeds of 2 GHz to 3.1 GHz and two or four cores with and without HyperThreading. The first group consists of five Core i5 processors and three i7's. The most economical i7, i7-4765T, has been clocked at 2GHz with a TDP of 35W. The other 35W processor is the i5-4570T, which are low tdp get by on only two cores available.
    All Haswell processors available, according to the specifications that the Chinese site VR-Zone published, have two-channel memory controller for DDR3 1600MHz memory, a HD 4600 GPU in the integrated and turbo functionality. The Haswell generation is not compatible with current motherboards for Sandy and Ivy Bridge processors: a motherboard with socket lga1150 is needed and delivers new Intel chipsets. The new generation should appear in the first half of 2013.
    Just to inform you.

    Harm,
    It may also be the beginning of the end for economical platforms with user-upgradable CPUs. From rumours that I read, the successor to Haswell will not offer socketed CPUs at all (in the mainstream form). Instead, the CPUs will be permanently soldered onto the motherboards. (Though Intel itself has not confirmed these rumours - at least not yet.) If those rumours hold true, then it would also be the beginning of the end for even a remotely affordable build-it-yourself PC, as the cheapest build-it-yourself PC might then cost far more money than even the most expensive current HP or Apple workstation - and anything that would be even remotely affordable would then be specced all too close to one another (extremely low performance, unsuitable for even media playback use, let alone video editing). I dread the day when we would have to spend tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars just to buy into a platform with even the least expensive upgradable CPU.
    Now that would definitely be the beginning of the end for desktop PCs as we know it.
    Likewise, Ivy Bridge-E (to be introduced some time in 2013) will mark the end of the line for (and thus end of life of) the current LGA 2011 platform. It is currently unknown which CPUs will be available. But from rumours I read, it might be available only in its stratosperically expensive i7 Extreme form, which means a minimum cost of more than $1000 just for the CPU itself. There will likely be no economical $300-ish quad-core version of Ivy Bridge-E, and there might not even be a $600-range CPU in that series.

  • End of life status for JDK 1.1.8

    I am currently using JDK 1.1.8-003, but I notice from the Sun website that they have begun the end of life process for this product and they will not be supporting it beyond October 09 2002.
    I should be grateful for advice on which newer version of Sun Java I should download for future use.
    Also, if I store the old and new versions in seperate folders am I likely to get a conflict between the two? Would my existing programs compile and run on the new version?
    Thanks in anticipation Stankingston..

    Same thing will happen to me, still using JDK 1.1.8.
    Sure we have to look for new versions. I am sure that not all
    existing programs will run under new versions. Same thing
    happened when JDK 1.0 ran out. So several methods now
    are deprecated. This is moving on...........
    Look for the most suitable kits. It's your decision depending
    of what you want to do in the future developing java programs.

Maybe you are looking for