I have problem, in not about coding, but i can't watch a lot of tutorial... I have an youtube account, in my phone anything work, but in my mac not.
I tried to change browser , i tried also to change network, wi-fi , lan, and also broadcasting with my phone but always the same result
I checked in setting and if i check from the icon i have that
but if i check from youtube menu
i have this:
So i read the documentation but i don't find the solution....
How is possible disable the restricted mode ???
if i try to disable from the setting menu( second 4 pic) i have this
But i'm the admin of my pc.... there is only one account ...
help!
Related
Our Action has worked as expected for years on iPhone, but something changed and now access is blocked for our customers.
How to reproduce the issue: Simply go to Assistant on iPhone and say "Hey Google, talk to the mobile concierge" (our Action). Instead of launching the Action, Assistant says "I need permission before I can use your personal info for anything. To change your settings, just open the Google Home app on your phone. Once that's done, ask me again!".
My question: Can Google confirm that this is a bug and not expected behavior? (Specifically, that a user must have 'Personal Results' turned on in order to access an Action on iPhone.)
I truly hope this is not expected behavior, but even if it is there are 2 issues:
instructions that are provided to users when Personal Results are turned off are wrong. Pointing users to the Google Home app is incorrect. Many iPhone users won't even have the Google Home app installed. But if you do have it installed, launching it and then following Assistant's directions does not lead to being able to open the Action. The correct instructions are to stay in the Google Assistant app, click on your profile pic, go to Devices, and then select your iphone. There, you can turn Personal Results on/off.
The additional problem is that upon testing, I already had Personal Results turned ON. In order to get access to our Action, I had to turn it off, and then turn it back on again. So this pretty clearly seems like a bug.
As an aside, we don't collect any personal information as part of our Action so I am unclear why Google implemented a change involving the Personal Results option as it relates to the ability to launch Actions like ours. All it has done is made it so that our customers can't use it from a huge percentage of phones out there (iPhones), and phones are the only device we are targeting for use with this Action.
I am trying to implement a splash page/ wifi landing page on my existing public wifi network, using the DNS method mentioned in Wiki, in which I host a custom DNS server, that will redirect ALL dns lookup to a local address where a web server is hosted, for all user before they click agree.
After the user clicked agree, my custom DNS server starts returning correct ip for the look up, thus, user will be able to get online.
note: We totally understand that this is in no way secure our network, and even putting our network at risk. But the goal here is to just to pop the landing page up in front of our users.
This approach actually works on Windows Phone (Windows 8 I tested) as splash page, and even on a computer when I try to open a random website, it redirects me to my page, and after I hit agree, I can get to the internet.
When I try it on iPhone/ Android, once I connect to the hotspot, the splash page/ wifi landing page appear as expected (because the device is trying to verify internet access by going to the set of pages) However, after I click agree, and allow internet access, both iPhone and Android splash screen will not go away. I have to force iphone to "use this wifi without network" to exit.
I wonder if there is a special (javascript?) method I can call in the page, or some package I need to send to the device? I noticed on iOS, if I click a link to the App Store, the splash page go away without disconnecting from the network, So, I guess I am missing something here.
For example, clicking the link to the iOS StackOverflow App on iOS device can be a workaround.
Had been googling around for a week now, nothing seems to came up.
by the way, I am building my custom dns server on node js, with the module dnsd.
=-=-=
=-=-=-=-= edit =-=-=-=-=-=
I also uploaded a demo of my code on GitHub:
https://github.com/kylelam/dnsd_wifi
To test it, run it in your local network (sudo node demo.js). Then, change your phone's dns to your machine's IP. Disconnect your phone from wifi and connect to it again. (on iOS, you might need to go into detail, and enable auto-login, and auto-join, or if you can't, just reboot.)
*note1: the server will need to run on port 53, and 80, so it need sudo.
*note2: please don't laugh at my code, I'm very new to this. But please do point out.
*note3: you will need to npm install these packages: os, express, dns, dnsd
ttl set to 0 might be the cause of the issue, try a different value like 5.
Recently i visited a restaurant and they use iPad for ordering. When i tried to close the app by pressing the home button it did not close. Rather it blinked (may be went to background and came up again i don't know). then i was prompted for admin password.
But when i searched stack overflow most answers suggest that it is not possible. As per my understanding i can use development certificate and implement this in my personal device. May be the restaurant might have also done that.
Can someone shed some light on how to achieve this functionality?
You can put an iPad into Kiosk mode.
This will essentially lock it into a particular app with a pass key required to do anything else.
http://www.ipadenclosures.com/blog/posts/your-ipad-into-a-kiosk
This has nothing to do with objective-c. It's a feature on iPhones and iPads called Guided Access: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5509?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US
There are a few ways you can do it - One of the simplest is through guided access
Another, even more secure, is through Apple Configurator - When you supervise a device you can lock it to one app and disable the controls just as with the guided access method. With this method you can supervise multiple devices and apply standard configurations quickly by simply plugging them into your Mac's USB port.
How to set up the known wifi with my known account/password in the iOS app ?
I want the user open the app and set up wifi background without letting user know. Can we do that with code ? and how if we can ?
If we can not, is there any alternative solution to resolve this problem with best user experience ? thanks
AFAIK, you cannot setup known wifi networks inside your app. What you could do is add the key 'UIRequiresPersistentWiFi' to your app's plist. That will ensure that the system shows a dialog informing the user about the requirement of wifi for the app. If i remember correctly, in case wifi is disabled, the dialog also displays a settings button by default which the user can click and be redirected to the 'Settings' app. HTH.
I am developing a business app for use on an iPad/iPod Touch. I am wondering if there is a way to restrict usage on the device to my app only. In other words, we don't want employees installing other apps such as games and playing around with the devices.
Yes, that's possible.
Check out the iOS Configuration Profile Programming Guide.
Edit: See the section about restrictions, it will allow you to do exactly what you need. Note however that you'll need to have access to those devices, ideally the devices should be company property. And you need to distribute your app via Enterprise Distribution.
Edit 2: Since iOS6, this feature is available through the normal settings app. It is called "Guided Access" and is part of the Accessibility settings. It will let you disable the home button (cancel guided access by triple-clicking the home button and enter the preset code) and it will even let you define areas within apps which should be disabled.
I don't think so, unless their device is jailbroken.
If they're logged into an Exchange server you could remote-wipe their phone if they install anything.
Do you provide the devices? Or they bring their own?
If you provide the devices that would mean you can use your Apple-id. If an employee would try to download any other app he would need the password of your Apple-id. So thats a simple way to prevent that.
Im am not sure if there is a total "lock" of such type.