Modrá smrt se blíží i na mobilní telefony
Citace: milzou 23 Května 2012, 14:07:33Modrá smrt se blíží i na mobilní telefony Ale to se mi zdá jako fotomontáž.
Hehe, a kde má Ťamťung ctrl-alt-del? :-)
If your phone has not received the update after the 45-day period...
Neviem či to tu už nebolo, ale ja som na to narazil až teraz Hitler is briefed about GNOME 3
Installing on Windows should be fairly easy for an advanced Windows system-level developer. It should only take about 6-10 hours. You will also need at least 3 to 6 GB of free disk space. Be sure to read the full instructions below before beginning. For added security, you may want to have a psychiatrist on hand.0. Make a full system backup. Seriously. Or skip to step 13.1. Install Visual C++ Express from http://www.microsoft.com/express/ (you'll need this to compile the raw source code that you'll get later)2. Install the Windows SDK from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/bb980924 (you'll need this for the compiler that you just downloaded to run completely through the make process)3. Find out where the binaries ended up. You're looking for RC.exe. It may be in C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1\Bin\x64 depending on your versions of Windows, SDK, etc. Wherever it is, put that in your path environment variable.4. Download and unzip LibYAML from http://pyyaml.org/wiki/LibYAML5. Find the yaml-0.1.x/win32/vs2008 folder and load the libyaml.sln file in Visual C++. It will try to convert it into something that it can understand.6. In the Solution Explorer go down the list of projects. Right-click each one, and under properties, go to Configuration Properties and modify the Intermediate Directory so that each project has its own. (Otherwise it will try to build them all at once, their log files will conflict with each other, and the build will fail.)7. Right-click the solution and choose "Build Solution". Sit back and watch the errors scroll up the screen for awhile until you see "Build: 13 succeeded, 0 failed, 0 up-to-date, 0 skipped".8. Try to find where the final binaries ended up. You should have a file called yaml.dll somewhere (perhaps under the Output/Debug/lib/DLL directory). Drop a copy of that into your PHP directory (the one that has php.exe) Presumably this is what PHP-yaml will use once you get it set up. If not, at least it makes your list of DLLs look a little more impressive.9. Download and unzip PHP-yaml from http://pecl.php.net/package/yaml10. Find and read the section in the README file where it tells you that you can use yaml.dsp with Visual Studio. Look in vain for the missing yaml.dsp file. Go back to pecl.php.net and keep downloading older versions until you find one that has the file.11. Try to open it in Visual Studio. It will attempt to convert it and silently fail. Stare at the blank blue window in confusion for a few minutes wondering if it's actually doing anything.12. Restore from the full system backup that you made in step 0. This will clear away all the gigabytes of junk that you've just downloaded and installed, and all of the system settings that have been changed, just in the ultimate hopes of getting one single little .dll which you still don't have.13. Download and install VirtualBox?? from http://www.virtualbox.org/14. Download the Kubuntu iso from http://www.kubuntu.org/15. Create a virtual machine in Virtualbox, and install Kubuntu to it, along with the Guest Additions.16. Within your virtual machine, follow the instructions for how to install on Unix.17. Make your main development directory a shared folder (through Virtualbox device settings) that you can access from either Windows or Kubuntu.18. Do your development on Kubuntu as necessary. Your scripts won't run in Windows, but at least you can develop and test them.I can't guarantee that this method will work for everyone, but it worked for me.
To je dobrý návod, zajímalo by mě, jestli takhle opravdu autor postupoval, protože je to na mrtvici:D
Pozor, není to o Ubuntu...
Citace: Rovano 21 Června 2012, 18:29:13 A to je jako fakt?