Hello,
I am working on an IM chat client that speaks to a middleware app on
the client that listens on port 3210 and responds on port 5235.
Am I out of luck in using the good ol' HTTPService class with this and have to
resort
to Loaders and Sockets? Is there a better way?
Thanks,
Nick
I sympathize but I think that the popularity of Mac OS as a Linux
replacement has made it even less likely
On 5/28/07, Marcelo de Moraes Serpa [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello folks,
I finally made my switch to GNU/Linux. It has been an awesome experience so
far (both in terms of fun
Yeah and totally don't buy Apple's FUD that only Apple Brand RAM
is a valid choice. After all, even they don't use their branded RAM in
their new laptops all the time. My 15 Powerbook came straight from
factory with Hynix RAM.
- Nick
On 5/16/07, Brett [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have Flex Builder on both my PC Laptop (Dell XPS 1210) and Mac (MacBook).
They both have 2 Ghz Core Duo processors and 2 Gb RAM. I am a big Mac
fan but as a consultant, sometimes the PC fits in easier in a client's
environment.
The Mac version works fine. It feels a little bit slower than
Has anyone had success using the Tomcat Plugin from Sysdeo with Flex
Builder? When I drop it in the plugins directory, it does not get
recognized as it would with Eclipse.
- Nick
Yes, same here. In addition, I found that hanging them up in my office
has made them (and me) quite the chick-magnet.
Thanks Ted!
- Nick
On 17 Apr 2007 07:38:24 -0700, Teddy Setiawan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Greeting from Indonesia ,
I don't know where to thanks , just receive Flex
I like the name association with the idea that Flash is finally landing
on the desktop instead of orbiting around it in the browser.
Ok, I need a life.
- Nick
On 3/16/07, Rich Tretola [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Due to a poor service I had to trash the original poll that was posted
last
The simplest dinstinction is that one is SOAP and the other one is XML.
A SOAP interface, with its type safety and other such assurances
contrasts to plain old XML, which has the advantage of simplicity.
- Nick
On 1/25/07, theduderino82 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've seen many tutorials
I was impressed by: http://www.scalenine.com/
- Nick
On 1/24/07, Weldon MacDonald [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm doing an app and want it to have the look and feel of a desktop
app, like photoshop or illustrator. Somehow I don't see styles as
being enough, but skinning sounds time
I despise Maven.
I know that this is a bit provocative, but my experience with those who
utterly abuse it to the point where the project is *anything but manageble*
has led me to this conclusion. I am always open to change, though.
Thoughts, anyone?
- Nick
On 1/8/07, Shailesh Mangal [EMAIL
Finally something that I feel qualified to help someone with:
I found the Flex 2 Style Explorer indespensible for this sort of thing:
http://examples.adobe.com/flex2/consulting/styleexplorer/Flex2StyleExplorer.html
For example, click on the Tabs menu items and build away!
- Nick
On 12/22/06,
a) I can't seem to break my panels across multiple displays, as I
could in the Windows PC environment. Anyone know how to do this on Mac?
My understanding is that this is an Eclipse limitation because the SWT
implementation for the Mac does not allow for this. Well, now you can
get the 30 Cinema
12 matches
Mail list logo