LXer: Review: Top 5 Email Client For Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows Users
location: linuxquestions.com - date: August 17, 2009
Published at LXer:
Linux comes with various GUI based email client to stay in touch with your friends and family, and share information in newsgroups with other users. The following software is similar to Outlook Express or Windows Live Mail and is used by both home and office user.
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LXer: Diskeeper Considering Linux, Mac OS X Support
location: linuxquestions.com - date: April 24, 2009
Published at LXer:
The VAR Guy double-checked this rumor and got confirmation: Diskeeper may leap beyond Windows to offer disk defragmentation software on Linux and Mac OS X. What’s motivating the potential Diskeeper moves? Here’s the scoop.
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LXer: Ubuntu One Is Now Available for Mac OS X
location: linuxquestions.com - date: October 12, 2012
Published at LXer:
Canonical has announced earlier today that they released a Beta client of their Ubuntu One service for Apple’s Mac OS X operating system.
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email client to connect to Windows Exchange server
location: ubuntuforums.com - date: March 2, 2012
I'm trying to find an email client that allows me to connect to a Windows Exchanges server. the only protocol I'm allowed to use is OWA--Outlook Web Access on port 443. imap and smtp are not allowed.
Can either Thunderbird or Evolution be configured to do this?
If this has been SOLVED, please point me to the solution.
Thanks.
LXer: MeeGo 1.0 (Moblin + Maemo) Linux Based OS By Intel And Nokia Has Been Relea
location: linuxquestions.com - date: May 27, 2010
Published at LXer:
MeeGo is an open source, Linux operating system based on Moblin (by Intel) and Maemo (by Nokia). MeeGo supports most Intel Atom-based netbooks, ARM-based Nokia N900, Intel Atom-based handset (Moorestown) and Intel Atom-based in-vehicle. MeeGo doesn't work on netbooks with GMA-500, Nvidia or ATI Graphics chipsets.
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LXer: The LinuxBased Paragon Rescue Kit for Mac OS X Lite
location: linuxquestions.com - date: May 2, 2008
Published at LXer:
Last week I got a press release about a new utility called Paragon Rescue Kit for Mac OS X Lite. It described a Mac backup and data recovery program, now in public beta testing, and invited potential testers to download a bootable disk image that could be burned to a CD and try the software out. The developer plans to offer this free Lite version as well as a paid full version later on. That all sounds fine, and I'm always interested in learning about new Mac utilities, especially when backups are among their capabilities. I'd previously written nice things about the company's NTFS for Mac OS X software (see "NTFS Options for Mac Expand, 2007-12-09), and I had high hopes for this new utility. But as soon as I downloaded the Paragon Rescue Kit disk image, I knew something was very different. It contains no Mac software at all - it's a Linux disk image.
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5 games for Linux, Mac and Windows. Pay what you want!
location: ubuntuforums.com - date: May 5, 2010
Hi all
I found this in a danish Linux forum, and it's 5 full games, where you pay whatever you can afford or want. You can choose to let it all go to charity, the developers og split it.
This is the way to release games!
http://www.wolfire.com/humble
Enjoy
/Ole
SQL Client for Mac OS X that works with MS SQL Server [closed]
location: linuxexchange.com - date: April 3, 2015
How can I connect to a remote SQL server using Mac OS X? I don't really need a GUI, but it would be nice to have for the color coding and resultset grid. I'd rather not have to use a VM.
Is there a SQL client for Mac OS X that works with MS SQL Server?
Linux/Mac OS X equivalents for Windows Communication Foundation
location: linuxexchange.com - date: June 4, 2009
--edit--
What application development frameworks/component models for Linux and Mac OS X are analogous to Windows Communication Foundation & COM, which provide high level IPC mechanisms for manipulating/communicating with software applications?
By high level communication model I mean RPC, publish/subscribe, etc.
I'm writing software for interaction devices which can be bound for manipulation of computation and data within some software. So far instance, I may have a control panel with physical sliders which are bound to various cells within a spreadsheet loaded in Excel, Calculate or Numbers. I have ways to sense events originating from the device, but the interaction subsystems(X11, Explorer, etc.) aren't extensible to handle new types of interaction events, so I need to capture and transport my own events to and from the software to which they're bound.
Also most of the applications I'd like to control cannot be modified to respond to these new types of events. And simulati
Python: What is the hard recursion limit for Linux, Mac and Windows?
location: linuxexchange.com - date: May 26, 2010
Python's sys module provides a function setrecursionlimit that lets you change Python's maximum recursion limit. The docs say:
The highest possible limit is platform-dependent.
My question is: What is the highest possible limits for various platforms, under CPython? I would like to know the values for Linux, Mac and Windows.
UPDATE: Can we please avoid "You're doing it wrong" answers? I know that trying to do very deep recursion is usually a bad idea. I've considered the pros and cons in my specific situation and decided that I want to do it.
please wait...
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