Windows 8 and Foundation Fieldbus Hardware and Software

Is NI Fbus hardware on Windows 8 and Server 2012?

Hi, 
We have sanity test on Windows8 and it works fine.
We did not test on Server 2012.

Similar Messages

  • Freezing and Rebooting issue - Hardware or Softwar...

    Sorry if this has been asked before...but...
    Is the freezing and rebooting issue caused by a fault in the Hardware or Software...?
    Can someone from BT please explain just exactly what is going on.
    Thank you,
    wdp

    sarahoxford wrote:
    Just been on live chat as we are fed up of freezing up, random reboots and failed recordings. Usually happens on Gold, Sky Sports - the non freeview channels. Advice from Geetesh was factory reset thus losing existing recordings, stating rather optimistically that this 'will resolve the problem'. When pushed on freezing and failed recordings issue Geetesh said recording of 'internet channels is in a test phase so won't be able to record'?? But we have recorded on gold, fox for example - response is that it won't always work, only for some customers.
    The advisor was getting confused. The bit about recording broadband channels still being in test phase only applies to BT Youview boxes. The recording functionality has been available for broadband channels on the BT Vision+ boxes since they launched last January.
    To answer the original question. The occasional freezes and reboots are caused by the New Look software (possibly in conjunction with associated system changes on the BT servers). Many of us had years of trouble free viewing using the Classic software on the same black BT Vision+ boxes. It was only when we were upgraded to the New Look software that all the troubles began. If however, you are getting such problems many times per day, or even many times per hour that could indicate a hardware fault.

  • Resume and job application hardware and software?

    What software and hardware is best/most efficient/stable to send out resume and fill in job applications? I have 1-15 minutes of time slots that I would like to use to find a better job. I would like to find something small enough to carry with me and not be noticed. Also how about the services used to connect the hardware, Verizon, AT&T, Sprint... Any wisdom is appreciated. My resume was made with pages. Thank you!

    Hi mountainbiker,
    Well, I'm sure it's not AppleWorks.
    You're in the AppleWorks forum, dedicated to questions about issues and techniques specific to Apple's productivity application AppleWorks.
    "Small enough to carry with me" would suggest the iPhone forum as a possibly appropriate place for your question.
    Good luck with the job hunt.
    Regards,
    Barry

  • I have a problem with my macbook pro, it start up really slow, takes like 20 min to start, when i put it to sleep cannot wake again, need to be restarted, i had tried a lot of things and check the hardware and its ok, what can i do?

    The problem start after i remove the bootcamp partition and after that i reinstall Mac OS X.

    This article may help: A flashing question mark appears when you start your Mac.

  • HT201302 I have Windows 7, but Hardware and Sound is not listed in my Control Panel. So, how do I transfer videos from my ipad to my computer?

    I am trying to transfer videos that I've recorded with my ipod camera to my computer. The option to auto play does not pop up when I plug in my ipod, so I looked up how to do this manually. Apple support websites told me to go to Control Panel and then Hardware and Sound, but Hardware and Sound is not listed in my control panel options. What other options do I have? I own a Dell laptop and I have Windows 7.

    Does the iPod show in My Computer? If so then go to My Computer>iPod>DCMI Folder and copy them from there to where you want them

  • IPhone Problem Hardware and Software Overview

    Dear iPhone Users, over the time I myself have been using the iPhone for some months and discovered some hardware and aoftware problems, with perhaps some solutions to such problems.
    a) The "Dead-Flashlight" Error: This is an annoying error, which is based on a hardware problem. I read a topic on the web which pointed out:
    i) There are two flashlights: Camera Flashlight and Flicker Flashlight. Camera Flashlight is adjusted near to the  camera recorder, this is the exact place of error. It seems that if this light does not turn on, you've probably managed to move its original place to behind the camera lens, where it may have become non-progressive. While flicker flashlight is adjusted on the other side or portion, even if you manage to drop your iPhone this light will not lose its function.
    ii) Solution: Apple company should manufacture the next product carefully, just so that in near future the company does not get defeated by competing industries. Finally, if you want to fix it, you should go see a hardware mechanic, they probably can fix it.
    b) No "Adobe Flash Player": First of all, Steve Jobs, explained that Adobe Flash should not be allowed to run on iPhones due to security reasons, what are those reasons?
    - Unauthorized Camera Access through Flash?
    - Redirecting to virus defined websites?
    - Recording the voices of a user while the Flash Object runs?
    - Too much cookies (save/load object files being stored)?
    - Decrease in Acceleration?
    To all these I would reply: "Bull-Crap". Flash is one if the best advancements ever created, it provides benefits like:
    - Most widely used for entertaining purposes.
    - Allows people/users to watch flash videos at low size but at high-quality.
    - Does not buffer, once loaded a flash onject video, you may stream it over and over again.
    - Provides great interface for educational purposes.
    - Easy to code, has examples all over the world wide web.
    - Many Popular MMORPG/RPG games are available.
    - Easy to upload and share.
    - Has great interface.
    - Almost all websites provide uploading and sharing facility.
    There are many more benefits, Flash should be on the iPhones.
    c) Wifi/GPRS related signal problems: The signals are very weak compared to product of Samsung Company (Samsung Galaxy Siii).
    Solution: Please make a product that is worth the money people pay your company, for gods sake!
    d) New Opportunity? Merge/Joint Ventures: Well, if iPhome wants to really be dominant? Then there is one company out there that will Make there next iPhone even more powerful, destroying its competitors. And when the name is displayed people rush to the iPhone stores: e.g "iPhone 6 Nexus"/iPhone 6N.
    Well I might know a company, but not going to tell until I think Apple is ready.

    Basics from the manual are restart, reset, restore.
    Have you tried all of these?

  • Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit hardware support

    Hi
    I was just wondering, if i install windows 7 32bit, will it support the hardware of the new MBP's?
    Cause i installed bootcamp assistant on my 32bit windows (Bootcamp) and some of my hardware is not recognized or "cant be started".
    Help is GREATLY appreciated.

    Hi,
    I recommend you try to update the BIOS and the motherboard chipset drivers for Windows 7 firstly.
    After that, please refresh the USB Stack:
    Control Panel – Device Manager – USB Serial Controllers – Right Click on EVERYTHING and UNINSTALL all except the category itself – Reboot
    . This refreshes the drive and the USB stack
    Then, right click on the LG EXTERNAL HDD HXD 5 320GB in Device Manager and select Update Driver Software.
    You may also try the Windows 7 built-in
    Hardware and Devices troubleshooter.
    Hope it can help you!
    Best Regards,
    Miya Yao
    This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. | Please remember to click "Mark as Answer" on the post that helps you, and to click "Unmark as Answer" if a marked post does not actually answer your question. This can be beneficial
    to other community members reading the thread.

  • Hardware or software?

    I'd appreciate some views about whether my totally flaky PowerBook is suffering from hardware or software problems, if it's possible to tell.
    The computer goes bad in various ways but most frequently some application will stop responding, and soon after that nothing can be saved, error messages appear about disk problems or shared library problems, and so on. Restarting would usually restore everything for a while, but it's been getting worse. This trouble started after I had a new (Apple) hard drive installed, but the place that installed it has twice checked the drive and all my hardware, and all tests were passed.
    When the trouble grew constant, I wiped my drive clean, installed a new system, dragged in the contents of folders from a backup, and things were better for a while and then got just as bad and even worse.
    What I did next makes me think that it's a hardware problem, like perhaps the new drive or RAM (both under warranty), and I'd like to know whether this makes sense:
    My backup is on an external HD, created with Carbon Copy Cloner. I can boot from that backup and everything functions normally-- I don't think I've ever had a problem when booted from the external system. But recently I (again)reformatted my laptop's drive and used CCC to clone from the external to the internal drive, and the resulting system would start up and immediately be frozen. Does it follow from this that either my cloning was imperfect or there is a hardware problem on my laptop?
    (I then reformatted the drive again, installed a fresh system and used Migration Assistant, or whatever it's called, to pull in the contents of my backup, and it worked for about a week and then got even flakier than ever. Won't boot up at all anymore. The bootable backup still seems fine, though.)
    The place that replaced my HD say the computer is old, just get a new one. But if it's just the drive, or just the RAM...

    After about a day and a half with the new hard drive installed, I have yet to see any evidence of my recurring problems. I spent the first evening using only a newly installed system on the new drive (worked fine), then yesterday morning I cloned everything back from my external "backup". So it's been a day of apparent full functioning. Considering that in its last stages, my computer wasn't able to even open Safari, this does point to a bad hard drive. The only other possibility, I suppose, could be some sort of loose connection that had gotten progressively worse, which could have jiggled back into place during the drive swap, in which case it might show itself again gradually as it did before (the problems started a few weeks after the HD was installed). At any rate, I seem to have a working computer at the moment, which is only to the good.
    After another day or so I am going to try to open Eudora. This was what seemed to trigger all of my earlier problems (they first began shortly after I made a change in Eudora Preferences, and the HD installers assured me that the problem was not in their new drive and that my "Eudora was toast." After that, it did seem that every time I used Eudora, problems would arise (rebooting seemed to make them okay temporarily) and so I have not used my POP3 email for months, and have about a thousand emails up on the server that will download into Eudora In as soon as I dare to try this.
    The guy who installed (in May) the almost-surely-bad HD said that if my experiment proved the drive was bad, I would probably be out of luck because the warranty on that drive had run out, which is a laugh because I came back with a complaint, for the first of about four times, only three weeks after it had been put in. But I don't know if it's worthwhile pursuing justice (assuming my new new drive continues to work). As I said, I do not need another 80GB drive, and don't think I ever will. Should I try to demand a refund for that drive and the labor costs of installing it and transfering data?
    Message was edited by: Paul-ny

  • OBIA and OBIEE implementation requirements and Questions

    Hi,
    I am looking for a documentation, which could give me some questions to implement OBIA and OBIEE. Do we have any documentation like this which could give customer a basic idea about OBIEE and OBIA and what it takes for them to implement them.
    Basically we are looking for a documentation of questionarie which could guide clients to choose OBIEE and OBIA with hardware and licensing requirements.
    Can you please share if you have come across such a document.
    Thank You.

    http://lmgtfy.com/?q=obiee+documentation

  • My ipod touch 2nd generation is stuck at recovery mode when I tried to update from a 3 software to a 4 software. I tried puting it in DFU mode to fix it but a window pops up about  the computer found new hardware and needs a cdrom. What do I do?

    My Ipod is stuck at restore mode, when I downloaded fixrecovery and zlib1, they gave me a file which I can't open iBSS.n72ap. Fixrecovery wanted me to put it in DFU mode and I did but a window from my computer pops up telling me that it found new hardware and wants a CDrom to install. The ipod did not come with a CDrom software. It wont go back, and iTunes does not recongnize it. What should I do?

    Try here.
    iOS: Device not recognized in iTunes for Windows
    I would first try removing and reinstalling all the Apple software using:
    Removing and reinstalling iTunes, QuickTime, and other software components for Windows Vista or Windows 7
    or
    Removing and Reinstalling iTunes, QuickTime, and other software components for Windows XP

  • Multiple-point Hardware And Software Failures in Two, Separate and Not-connected Computers At The Same Time...

    A few days ago, I was working on a restoration of a 100-years-or-so-old Calculus book on one of my Linux based computers, while my other computer with the Microsoft Windows Vista operating system was serving as Broadcast TV receiver with its USB HDTV tuner
    in the afternoon.  The weather in Los Angeles was summer-like in November, with clear skies and 90 degree Fahrenheit temperatures.  All of a sudden, my Linux based computer halted in the middle of the processing it had performed hundreds of times
    before in hotter days.  It would not restart.  The entire boot block of the disk seemed to have been garbled.  This did not seem even feasible at all, so I decided to shut its power off for a while.   It came back up after a while,
    and everything looked normal.  Then, it did the same thing again.  I decided to open its cover and check on its multiple fans as there was nothing else that could go wrong.
    I then noticed that the computer with the Microsoft Windows Vista Operating system which had been receiving the broadcast TV, was displaying a freshly-booted log-in screen.  It had "Blue-screened" while I was working on the other computer
    across the large room.  This again did not seem any feasible as there had been utterly no connection between these two computers.  Even the AC power line circuit was different.  Furthermore, this computer had the most extensive air-cooling system
    I had built to have it work through 107 degree Fahrenheit temperatures indoors.  Anyway, I logged back in and started the broadcast TV reception again.  Sure enough, after a while it "blue-screened" one more time...
    I went back to the Linux-based computer and found all of its fans operating, but with somewhat hotter disk drives.  The problem was that in hotter days, the same computer had cooler disk drives with nothing different.  I concluded that somehow
    the 80 mm fan mounted in the front side of the case, with its side with rotating blades clamped on the perforated part of the steel case serving as the fan grill, was starting up fine.   But, as the time passed the spring-loaded rotating hub was slowly
    drawn toward the perforated steel case by two means: The partial vacuum formed by the suction generated by the blades of the fan, and by the magnetic attraction of the rotating hub with electro-magnets in it to the partially magnetized, perforated steel casing.
      The first effect was always there, so it was not the real cause, but once something else came along, it really helped the latter.  The hub was slowly drawn to the perforated steel casing due to magnetic attraction, with the holes in the casing
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    eddy-currents in the metal by the moving electro-magnets had added even more drag on the rotating hub, causing it to come nearly to a halt.  The disk drive electronics was heating up and was causing DMA access faults which in turn caused the Linux kernel
    to panic and halt.
    Well, this was nearly unbelievable, but true...  I had not brought any magnets into the room and I still do not know how the computer case got magnetized.  It has been working at the same location for years.  The solution was to move the fan
    away from the perforated steel casing a little so that some air could come in through the gaps on the sides of the fan (hence supplying a by-pass), reducing the partial vacuum in front of the fan.  This kept the rotating hub far enough away to prevent
    the massive induced eddy-current drag from slowing the fan down to a halt.  The computer now works perfectly with the very same fan as it has had been doing for years. 
    The real solution is to saw the perforated part of the steel casing in front of the fan away, and to replace it with a better fan grill.  The best fan grill material  I have found is the finely perforated, thin, black aluminum sheet that is usually
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    The next problem was the halting of  the computer with the Microsoft Windows Vista operating system with a blue-screen.  The fans in it could not be the cause of this, as it had already had the best improvements I could put in it,  with even
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    load and to implement them.  Sure enough, the computer again "blue-screened" in the middle of the update procedure.
    That was somewhat too much, but there was nothing else I could do other than to debug it.  I had not changed anything in the computer and its power supply, completely internally updated by myself a few years ago, was working perfectly.  Whatever
    was causing it was not in the hardware.  It was not in the November 2014 software updates either as it "blue-screened" before those were announced.  I brought the computer back up after several disk and other software checks and after the
    completion of the updates,  I gingerly turned the network modem on.  I then sent the reports on the six failures (three "blue-screen" type failures and three "Anti-malware Executable" failures) to Microsoft with all of details
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    I should use the "Microsoft Fix-It" for this problem and it pointed to a link to download it.  I did download it.  It ran and the "blue-screen" problem just went away, as if it had never been there...
    -- Yekta

    I ordered the capacitors on Friday and they arrived on Monday, November 17, 2014.  I removed the motherboard from the machine, by removing all PCI and AGP boards, drive and fan connectors and the computer power supply first.  The motherboard then
    simply unbolted from the case and came out with the CPU fan assembly still attached.
    I wrapped the solder side of the motherboard with aluminum foil and set up a work place with the aluminum foil under the motherboard and myself electrically well grounded.  Here came another surprise:  There were four more capacitors of the same
    kind just behind the CPU fan assembly and their tops were also deformed with one of them leaking the electrolyte inside from the the top.  Luckily, I had ordered more than two capacitors to get the quantity discount and the lower rate of shipping. 
    I do use them in other circuits I occasionally build.
    Technically, the only thing one needed to do was to unsolder the six old capacitors from the motherboard and to solder six new ones in in their place with the correct polarities.  However, due to fact that the capacitors span the 3.3 V power plane and
    the ground plane in the multi-layer motherboard, it is nearly impossible to unsolder these capacitors using regular, fine-tip soldering irons.  The thick copper of the power and the ground planes carry the soldering iron heat away very fast, preventing
    the solder from melting quickly.  Continuous application of heat at this point will simply burn the internal insulating epoxy layers and cause shorts inside the motherboard which are impossible to fix in any reasonable amount of time.
    The only reasonable way to remove these capacitors was to dismantle the capacitors from the top leaving their already soldered leads in place.  The new capacitors were then tack soldered to these stubs using lead-free, hard solder.  However, the
    CPU fan assembly and the CPU itself had to be removed from the board to be able to work on these capacitors.
    To dismantle the capacitors from the top, I first drilled small holes at the tops of the capacitors at the intersections of the indentations using the tip of a hobbyist's knife.   I then used needle nosed pliers to peel back the triangular sections
    of aluminum from the center at the tops to their bases at the top edges of the capacitors.  Next, I  removed the plastic layers covering the outside of the capacitors by scoring the plastic layers first from the bottom to the top using the tip of
    the hobbyist's knife and peeling the plastic layers off starting at the cut.  The following step was to cut the aluminum cans of the capacitors from the top to the bottom using the hobbyist's knife like a can opener.  One could not use a saw like
    tool here to accomplish the feat as the saws generated very fine metal chips which were very hard to remove and were certain to cause shorts in the densely populated mother board.  The cans were then peeled off the rest of the capacitors starting from
    the top at the cuts using needle nose pliers, revealing the spiral-wound metal-paper layers of the capacitors.
    The wound layers of the capacitors were peeled off layer by layer by cutting into the layers from the top to the bottom, leaving only the two aluminum electrodes which were crimped and soldered to the leads of the capacitors.  The picture below shows
    the six capacitors with one of them dismantled (left) and with all of them dismantled (right):
    The  black disks below the aluminum electrodes are the rubber plugs covering the bottoms of the capacitors.  The rubber plugs were then cut in half using the hobbyist's knife and removed using the needle nose pliers.  It was not possible to
    solder to the aluminum electrodes, so these were trimmed at the point they were crimped on the leads of the capacitors, leaving only the stubs of the capacitors' leads soldered to the motherboard.
    The new capacitors with suitably trimmed leads were then soldered to these stubs with the correct polarities using lead-free, hard solder.  The capacitors were lightly bonded together using a flexible glue to prevent them from moving.  The picture
    below shows the new capacitors as installed into the motherboard:
    I then assembled everything back together and turned the computer on.  The BIOS complained on the boot screen that the CPU was out of its socket and it needed to be reset.  I set BIOS parameters correctly to their original values.  The computer
    came up and worked without any problems.  I typed this message on  my newly repaired computer running the  Microsoft  Windows Vista operating system. 
    By the way, the manufacturing date on the motherboard is 09/12/2002 and the CPU is a Socket-478, 2.4 GHz, Intel Pentium-4.
    -- Yekta

  • Remote Desktop Services - VDI / Hardware and Software requiremnts

    I am going to plan to do POC for 50 user on customer end for Microsoft VDI installation. For this i required hardware and software requirement.

    Hi Pratik,
    Thank you for posting in Windows Server Forum.
    It all depends on how you want to configure your VDI environment. In Server 2012\R2 there are 2 flavors: Pooled & Personal and further can deploy both that as Managed\UnManaged deployment. You can check following article for further details.
    RDS Hardware Sizing and Capacity Planning Guidance
    http://blogs.technet.com/b/iftekhar/archive/2010/02/10/rds-hardware-sizing-and-capacity-planning-guidance.aspx
    Choose a VDI Deployment Scenario
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn645525.aspx
    Deploying VDI for RDS 2012 / 2012R2 – Part I
    http://thewolfblog.com/2014/03/26/deploying-vdi-for-rds-2012-2012r2-part-i/
    Hope it helps!
    Thanks.
    Dharmesh Solanki
    TechNet Community Support

  • Hi..Iam an Architect...I would like to purchase a macbook pro 15.4 inch 512 gb, 16 gb.So i would like to know the possibilities and advantages of using 3d softwares and autocad.And also is 3dsmax available for mac os or should i install it with windows.

    hi..Iam an Architect...I would like to purchase a macbook pro 15.4 inch 512 gb, 16 gb.So i would like to know the possibilities and advantages of using 3d softwares and autocad.And also is 3dsmax available for mac os or should i install it with windows.

    System Requirements for AutoCAD 2013 for Mac:
    Apple® Mac OS® X v10.8.0 or later (Mountain Lion), OS X v10.7.2 or later (Lion), or OS X v10.6.8 or later (Snow Leopard) with 64-bit Intel processor
    Apple® Mac® Pro 4.1 or later; MacBook® Pro 5.1 or later (MacBook Pro 6.1 or later recommended); iMac® 8.1 or later (iMac 11.1 or later recommended); Mac® mini 3.1 or later (Mac mini 4.1 or later recommended); MacBook Air® 2.1 or later; MacBook® 5.1 or later (MacBook 7.1 or later recommended)
    3 GB of RAM (4 GB recommended)
    2.5 GB free disk space for download and installation (3 GB recommended)
    All graphics cards on supported hardware
    1,280 x 800 display with true color (1,600 x 1,200 recommended)
    All Mac OS X supported language operating systems
    Apple® Mouse, Apple Magic Mouse, Magic Trackpad, MacBook® Pro trackpad, or Microsoft-compliant mouse.
    Mac OS X-compliant printer
    Additional Requirements for 3D Modeling (All Configurations)
    Pentium 4 or Athlon processor, 3 GHz or greater or Intel or AMD dual-core processor, 2 GHz or greater
    4 GB RAM or more
    6 GB hard disk space available in addition to free space required for installation
    1,280 x 1,024 true color video display adapter 128 MB or greater, Pixel Shader 3.0 or greater, Direct3D®-capable workstation-class graphics card
    3ds Max 2014 and 3ds Max Design 2014 are available for windows only:
    System requirements for 3ds Max 2014 and 3ds Max Design 2014
    Windows 8 or Windows® 7 64-bit Professional operating system
    64-bit Intel or AMD multi core processor
    4 GB RAM minimum (8 GB recommended)
    4.5 GB free disk space for installation
    3-button mouse
    Latest version of Microsoft® Internet Explorer®, Apple® Safari®, or Mozilla® Firefox® web browser
    Recommened Mac:
    15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display : 15.4-inch (diagonal) LED-backlit display with IPS technology
    2880-by-1800 native resolution at 220 pixels per inch with support for millions of colors
    Hardware
    2.4GHz quad-core  Quad-core Intel Core i7
    16GB 1600MHz DDR3L SDRAM
    512GB Flash Storage
    Autodesk AutoCAD 2014 for Windows vs AutoCAD 2013 for Mac
    USER INTERACTION                                                                          Windows         Mac
    Command line


    Multifunctional grips


    Dynamic input


    Auto-complete command entry2


    Hide and isolate objects


    Create and select similar objects


    Delete duplicate objects


    Properties palette


    Quick properties palette

    Quick view


    In-canvas viewport controls


    Editable UCS icon


    Layer tools3


    Layer groups


    Layer state manager4

    New layer notification

    Filter

    Quick select

    DesignCenter

    Tool palettes

    Content palette

    Navigation bar

    ShowMotion

    Coverflow navigation

    Multi-touch gestures

    AutoCorrect command entry

    File tabs

    DOCUMENTATION
    Geometry creation & measurement tools


    Parametric constraints


    Associative arrays


    Copy array


    Object and layer transparency


    Strike-through text


    Blend curves


    Multiple hatch editing


    Sheet set manager

    Project manager

    Dynamic blocks5


    Model documentation tools

    Table style editing

    Hatch creation preview

    Multiline style creation

    Digitizer integration

    Change space

    Express tools6

    Text align

    DESIGN
    Solid, surface, and mesh modeling


    Surface curve extraction


    PressPull


    Autodesk materials library


    Material creation, editing, and mapping

    Basic rendering


    Sun properties7


    Visual styles7


    Advanced rendering settings

    Camera creation

    Walkthroughs, flybys, and animations

    Autodesk ReCap point cloud tool

    Import Sketchup files (SKP)

    Geographic location

    CONNECTIVITY
    External references (DWG)


    Image underlays


    PDF underlays


    DWF underlays

    DGN underlays

    In-place editing of DWG references


    Batch publish


    Publish or plot to PDF


    Plot styles


    Plot style table editor


    AutoCAD WS connectivity


    Autodesk 360 connectivity

    Data links

    Data extraction

    Hyperlinks

    Markup set manager

    dbConnect manager

    eTransmit

    WMF import and export

    FBX import and export

    SAT import and export


    Additional model import

    Design feed

    Share on Facebook

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    Standalone licensing


    Network licensing


    Cross-platform licensing

  • Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) and XAML

    Hi,
    I just saw a high-level presentation about Windows
    Presentation Foundation (WPF) and XAML. I understand that one of
    the advantages to using this new desktop technology is better
    control over image resolution. I'm no techie, but I immediately
    thought of the challenges we Captivate users have of trying to make
    screenshots larger, but having them end up blurry. Will this new
    technology somehow help with this problem? Thanks!
    Trudie

    I wouldn't think so.
    AFAIK, WPF is the XML language that windows will use to
    render the interfaces. Without knowing too much about it I imagine
    that it will build parts/all of the Vista interface with vectors as
    opposed to bitmaps which will work better for a greater number of
    montiors (e.g. check out the windows XP boot splash bitmap on a
    large hi res montior....ewww!). However, this will not make a
    difference to resizing a captured image of the interface.
    For the purposes of this discussion let's say vectors are
    mathematical descriptions of what should be drawn (shape, outline,
    fill, gradient, etc) while bitmaps are images with a fixed number
    individually coloured of pixels/dots.
    Screenshots images are generally captured in a bitmap format.
    When you attempt to increase the overall dimensions of the image
    your image processing software makes a guess as to what color each
    pixel/dot must be in the resized image based on a sample from the
    original image and that's why they tend to look blurry. The better
    your software can guess/resample, then the better the resulting
    image.

  • Is it legal to use Macintosh virtual machine hosted by Windows operating system? If yes, please suggest recommended hardware and license cost?

    Is it legal to use Macintosh virtual machine hosted by Windows operating system? If yes, please suggest recommended hardware and license cost?

    steve359 wrote:
    I thought that at least some version of OSX could not be VM in Mavericks, but if you say it is allowed so be it.
    There are some people who dispute the details of what "the software" means in the license. From my point of view, I have a license to run all of those versions each license explicity says I can use a VM. I don't think it is illegal or even unseemly. The only version restriction I know of that the new VM policy only applies to Lion or greater. 10.6 could only be run on a VM if you had the expensive server version. The licenses do explicity list the acceptable uses and that includes OS X Server, software development, and non-commercial use. They don't want people selling online access to OS X, that's all.
    I do not VM Windows on my MBP because I have no need.
    Me neither. I used to though. Funny how a Mac was the most critical tool in debugging web sites on various versions of IE
    I don't even run OS X in a VM anyway. It does work but it is quite resource intensive. Maybe if I had one of those new Mac Pros...

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