

This improves rendering quality on high DPI screens and is a prerequisite for custom theming in a future release. Various details in keyboard navigation have been improved, in particular related to the accessibility mode.įor the newer themes, all code for drawing controls still using bitmap resources has been changed to use drawing algorithms. A variety of sound schemes has been added for audio feedback.New application and installer icons are used.The dialog to show the version information has been redesigned.Quartz theme automatically in sync with the macOS appearance If activated, the Quartz theme fitting to the current active OS appearance is used on startup, and once the macOS appearance changes during runtime, the theme is switched accordingly. Also on macOS, the Quartz Light and Dark themes can be set to automatically adjust to the current system appearance as an option. There are no new themes, but now it is possible to switch live between Quartz Light and Quartz Dark. This is the latest LTS release of Java, which replaces OpenJDK 11 and includes the new port of the Java platform to macOS arm64.īesides new platforms and runtime versions, there are also some new features. The Java runtime and OpenJFX framework used in SAP GUI for Java 7.80 are updated to SapMachine 17 and OpenJDK 17. With this native build for Apple silicon, SAP GUI for Java also is prepared for the day, Apple will remove Rosetta2 from the OS like done before with the compatibility layer for PowerPC after the switch to Intel CPUs. *) manual stop watch **) numbers from Activity Monitor It also consumes less memory.Īs a sample, comparing the Intel version and Apple silicon version from startup, connecting to a system and navigating through a few transactions like se80, va01, migo, mm03 etc., resulted in following numbers on a MacBook Pro with M1 Max: SAP GUI for Java 7.80 The CPU usage and as a result the power or battery consumption is significantly reduced. It feels significantly more responsive than the Intel version using Rosetta2. SAP GUI for Java 7.80 natively supports macOS on Apple silicon. With the increasing popularity of ARM CPUs in mobile and now even desktop devices, it is time to bring SAP GUI for Java to a new CPU platform. Native support for Intel 64-bit started back in 2009 with SAP GUI for Java 7.20, the support for Intel 32-bit ended with SAP GUI for Java 7.50 reaching EOL in September 2021. SAP GUI for Java 7.80 is now available for download at SAP Software Downloads ( direct link).įor more than a decade, the only CPU platform for running SAP GUI for Java has been Intel.
