Closed. This question is off-topic. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it's on-topic for Stack Overflow.
Closed 10 years ago.
Improve this question
Windows and Linux have numerous books talking about their internal architectures. I would like to know if there is such a book talking the same topic about Apple Darwin/XNU. Thanks.
It's a little old (2007), but Mac OS X Internals: A Systems Approach, by Amit Singh, is a lengthy guide to OSX history, the XNU kernel, and filesystems. It notably leaves out networking.
Related
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 7 years ago.
Improve this question
I have MacOS 10.11 Beta 3 (El Capiton) installed and want to test my iPhone app in IPv6 only NAT64+DNS64 configuration. But I am unable to find the "Create NAT64 network" option in my "Network sharing" dialog.
Has anyone faced this issue? Is there a way to enable this?
Thanks for your help in advance.
This may help: https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/4971 It covers the topic you described.
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 9 years ago.
Improve this question
See this image the iOS App Development option is disable, How I can enable it.
You need to be a Team Agent or Admin to create development certificates.
[Source]
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 8 years ago.
Improve this question
We would like to implement SASweave, but our department runs off of a server version of SAS. Has anyone implemented this setup? I would be interested to hear about your experiences, whether positive or negative. If it doesn't work with server SAS, I'd like to know beforehand so that I can spare our IT group the fun of fighting with it.
Closed. This question is off-topic. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it's on-topic for Stack Overflow.
Closed 11 years ago.
Improve this question
Does anybody know if youtube uses Django, Rails or some other framework?
I googled, but couldn't seem to find any straight forward answer.
Presumably this is their stack -
Apache
Python
Linux Suse
MySQL
Psyco - dynamic python-C compiler
lighttpd - for video instead of apache
maybe Java
According to this website. But most of these companies keep it a secret what exactly they use. Even to date its not clear what kind of webservers Google uses...
Closed. This question is off-topic. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it's on-topic for Stack Overflow.
Closed 12 years ago.
Improve this question
Can you sell software built using Ruby on Rails? If so are there any pitfalls in doing so?
Is it any different to selling software built with PHP for example?
Edit: to elaborate - could I build a forum app like vB and sell that as they do?
If you want legal advice ask a lawyer. Any answer given here would be worthless, even if a lawyer did answer they are not "Your" lawyer.
Rails is under the MIT License
Ruby is under the Ruby License
In general you would find your code to be your code.