

Nicky does note that there are some issues with the Mac 64-bit version of the viewer, some of which prompted an update following an initial release of the test viewers. I understand the 32-bit versions of the viewer have also been merged with these updates, but have not been formally released. This means the 64-bit viewer now includes the Asset HTTP updates from the Lab and the current release version ( 5.60).

BLACK DRAGON VIEWER SECOND LIFE DOWNLOAD FULL
As the Launcher is also intended to start / terminate the viewer’s crash logging, and given – if I recall correctly – Kokua utilises the Lab’s viewer update process, I assume use of the Launcher may / will be folded-into the Kokua’s 64-bit Windows flavours in the future.īeyond this, the viewer is functionally identical to the last full release of Kokua (5.8), with additional updates from the more recent LL viewer releases since that date. However, at this point, neither actually utilises it directly: the installation short-cut for the viewer points directly to the viewer. EXE, designed to ensure the correct version of the viewer (32-bit or 64-bit) is installed on your PC when updating the viewer. The Windows viewer builds include the SL Launcher. all of the versions are based on the Lab’s Alex Ivy code base. For convenience, I downloaded the 64-bit Windows version with RLV. Each is functionally identical to the other, with the exception of … RLV inclusion. The Kokua 64-bit builds come in both RLV and non-RLV versions. Please refer to the links at the end of this article for all download links to the viewers. I’ve not driven either viewer to any great extent, so the following is more informational than anything else. Nicky has clearly labelled his versions as test releases, which Niran is referring to his as an alpha series of releases. It should be noted that in neither case are the provided 64-bit viewers the final, polished article. Towards the middle of the month, NiranV Dean issued a 64-bit version of Black Dragon for Windows. As the Lab’s 64-bit Alex Ivy viewer progresses through release candidate stage and the point where the code is regarded as a stable enough for TPVs to start picking up, viewer developers having been doing just that.įirst out of the v5-stage gates at the start of September was Nicky Perian with 64-bit versions of Kokua for Windows and Mac.
