I am wondering if it is possible to use VTune 2013 or VTune2015 using a Windows embedded operating system. I read on the release notes that "embedded editions not supported" but I would like to know if there is a way for example to collect data on a Windows embedded system and view results on standard windows system and/or to perform remote mode using Windows embedded target.
Thanks,
Giorgio
VTune 2015 effective Update 3 can be used on subset of Windows Embedded variants: Windows Embedded Standard, Windows Embedded Pro
and Windows Embedded Industry.
Other variants like Windows Embedded Compact and Windows Embedded Handheld are not supported by VTune as they differ substantially from desktop Windows.
Regards,
Katya
Related
I have developed a custom media player that works on Windows 7. I used QMediaPlayer, QVideoWidget and QMediaPlaylist classes. I need to port the app to Linux. Do these classes also exist for Linux? Do they come automatically when installing Qt?
I tried copying the project to my Linux partition and recompiling but it can not find the headers.
Check weather the major version of Qt is the same on both platforms.
Seeing your description, I believe you are using an older version of Qt on the Linux machine as compared to the Windows machine.
Hope this helps.
Would Windows CE 5.0 binaries be compatible on Windows Embedded Compact 7 and 8?
I've searched the Internet for a long time with no answers that are thorough or definite enough concerning the backward compatibility of these OSs.
Also I've tried to find the ceappcompat app mentioned here; it looked like it was supposed to be in the Platform Builder tools found in the installation of Windows Embedded Compact 7 x86, but it wasn't there.
By way of experiment, I have found that Compact 7 is, in principle, backward compatible with respect to native applications. I was able to run x86 applications built against Windows CE 5.0 Standard SDK on a Compact 7 OS. However, Compact 2013 is a different story. As explained in the answer to a similar question on MSDN forum, existing Windows CE applications must be recompiled in order to run on Compact 2013. Reportedly, the breaking change in the new OS is the price paid for the ability to use the same Visual Studio 2012 tool chain for both desktop and Embedded Compact Windows targets.
Is it possible to use TiedSDK under Ubuntu(12.10) to create Windows and Mac apps?
And if it is possible how should I use the other SDKs(Win|OSx)?
Currently there is no way to cross compile / generate installers for other platforms. If you want installers for windows .. you need to be running on a windows system. You can get a virtual machine with any windows operating system.
I deploy a asp.net web application to datacenter in usa using windows 2008 64bits and sqlserver express 2008.
if i using mac-os or linux ubuntu or unix or mobile android or iphone or ipad my application works better ... very fast... but if i using windows xp, 7, 2008 this same application performance is bad .. more bad .... it's joke? I using power configuration in pc (4gb ram, dual core).
what's happen ?
Thanks
Douglas
It probably has more to do with the differences between the browsers than anything else. Since you can't really use the exact same browser on all systems, try using a browser that allows you to see a time window of when resources are pulled down and how long they take. I know Chrome has built in tools for this, and I'm sure Firefox does as well.
Is it ok to develop ASP.NET web applications on MacBook Pro ?
.NET is only available for Windows. There's the Mono project, which is not affiliated with Microsoft, which aims to create an open source .NET runtime and developer tools, usable on *NIX (including Mac OS X). If you want to develop .NET applications under Mac OS, this is your only choice.
Speaking of a MacBook though, you can install Windows on it using Boot Camp or run it in a virtual machine and develop in Visual Studio like on any other Windows box. And this is ok, I don't think anybody will confiscate your Mac for doing so.
If you have Windows running on the Mac then it is OK.
Another way is to use some .NET IDE for Mac (e.g. MonoDevelop)
New from Microsoft, IDE for Mac, Linux and Windows: https://code.visualstudio.com/Download
The best method to do that would be to install windows 10 with bootcamp and then install .NET . The steps involved are pretty straight forward. Just open bootcamp and create the partition and select the ISO of windows. Once installed, tap the options key on boot to boot to windows. If everything is smooth, you can continue the development, else, just open bootcamp again and delete the partition.
https://www.microsoft.com/en-in/software-download/windows10 - open this on mac to get the legal windows image. This will be valid only for a limited time