<td><a href="manual_qs_va.html#qsc">JABAWS Virtual Appliance (VA)</a></td>\r
</tr>\r
<tr>\r
- <td>Running JABAWS for my group, lab, or organization</td>\r
+ <td>Running JABAWS on the <strong>cloud</strong>, for one or many users</td>\r
+ <td><a href="man_awscloud.html">JABAWS AMI</a></td>\r
+</tr>\r
+<tr>\r
+ <td>Running JABAWS for my group, lab, or organization on the <strong>local</strong> infrastructure </td>\r
<td><a href="manual_qs_war.html#qsc">JABAWS Web Application aRchive (WAR)</a></td>\r
</tr>\r
<tr>\r
<li>download and install <a href="http://www.vmware.com/products/player">VMWare Player</a>.</li>\r
<li>Unpack the JABAWS virtual appliance and open it with VMware Player.</li>\r
</ol>\r
-<p>If you use a Mac, or prefer not to use VMWare, then :</p>\r
-<ol>\r
- <li>download and install <a href="http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Download_Old_Builds_3_2">Virtual Box</a>.</li>\r
- <li>Unpack the JABAWS virtual appliance, import it into VirtualBox and then start the appliance. </li>\r
-</ol>\r
+<p>If you work on Mac do the same using <a href="http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/overview.html">VMware Fusion</a>, or for free alternative use a WAR JABAWS package. </p>\r
<div id="testing_jabaws">\r
<h3>Testing</h3>\r
<p>The easiest way to test that your JABAWS Virtual appliance is working is to use Jalview.</p>\r
<!-- about end-->\r
</div>\r
<!-- content end--> \r
-<div id="copyright">Last update: 1 April 2011<br/>\r
+<div id="copyright">Last update: 1 August 2011<br/>\r
Peter Troshin, Jim Procter and Geoff Barton, The Barton Group, University of Dundee, UK</div>\r
</div><!-- wrapper end-->\r
</div> <!-- page end-->\r