onscreen reference doesn't open - intuit-partner-platform

I am using IE 10 on a new computer and when I try to open the Onscreen Reference for Intuit Development Kits, I get a message that BackBase software does not support the browser. After downloading the latest Firefox, I am able to open the OSR, but it acts strangely. What can I do to get IE 10 to open the OSR or to get Firefox to work properly?

Enable compatibility mode and see if that resolves the issue.

Related

Issues when sharing screen using Vidyo Screen Share Chrome extension on Vidyo.io

I'm using vidyo.io as videoconference solution in our platform. I'm having an issue with Vidyo's Chrome extension for screen sharing that is easily reproducible using the very own Vidyo's samples:
If you download Vidyo's web sample from developer portal, open samples/VidyoConnector/js/VidyoConnector.html in Chrome, choose 'Join via the browser', and click the 'Window share' select list (there is no need to start a conference to reproduce the error), Chrome will open the Vidyo Screen Share extension page twice, even if you already have the plugin installed. For this to work you have to uninstall the extension and reinstall it again. It will work until the end of the current session.
In the other hand if you go to Vidyo.io developer portal, choose "Demo" from "Developers" menu and start a conference using the "Join via the browser" button, click the same 'Window share' select list the Vidyo Screen Share extension works as expected, allowing you to pick a window or a screen to share.
In our implementation we're having the same problem as the code from web sample listed above, but if an example of our code would be of any help to clarify the issue, here you have an excerpt (we're using Angular, and here you have some TypeScript code):
private vidyoConnector: VidyoClientLib.VidyoClient.VidyoConnector;
(...)
selectedWindowShare(share: VidyoClientLib.VidyoClient.VidyoLocalWindowShare) {
this.vidyoConnector.SelectLocalWindowShare({localWindowShare: share})
}
This issue happens only on Chrome. When we use Firefox it works seamlessly. I'm using Chrome 69 on OSX High Sierra.
Any suggestion on how to solve this will be much appreciated. Thanks in advance!
If I am not mistaken, you are either running the VidyoConnector.html directly in the browser or hosting the sample on non-secured hosting (HTTP).
For the Vidyo Screen Share Chrome extension to work correctly, you need to host it on a secured hosting (HTTPS).
You can verify this by using our hosted sample here:
https://static.vidyo.io/latest/connector/VidyoConnector.html
Hope this helps.

Change Default Browser in Eclipse

I'm using Eclipse Luna and I have created an app using the Google App Engine SDK.
When I'm trying to deploy my app to GAE, Sign in to Google Services window open and when I give my Google credentials it show another window with Account Permissions. But I can't click Accept and Cancel buttons in this window, because this window display that page using Internet Explorer embedded window. Due to issues in IE, those buttons are disabled.
So I change my browser from Window => Preferences => General => Web Browser to Firefox. But still Sign in to Google Services window is open in IE embedded window.
How can I change this to open in Firefox embedded window?
I think answer is update your IE7 , 8 to IE9.. it will work fine.
It's not possible to change the embedded browser in Eclipse. There is a very old bug open to add this functionality, but it doesn't look promising. See also this answer.
For now the solution is to to use an external browser, as was suggested above.

Open with Google Chrome app

Is it possible to make a Chrome app handle certain types of extensions?
For example, setting a Chrome app to be launched when you double click a .txt file, instead of launching the Chrome app first and browsing for the file.
Yes, on ChromeOS via file_handlers. On other operating systems, not yet.
The bug to track this work on Windows: https://crbug.com/130455
Linux: https://crbug.com/138665
I'm not sure if / where there is a mac bug but it is also planned.
This should help you : http://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch000128.htm
Especially the part at the end of it.
In the future - Google it, it was like the 2 result.

Can't use all features of remote web inspector of BlackBerry 10

Some features features of remote web inspector of BlackBerry 10 are not available. For example, if I press 'Elements', 'Network' or 'Timeline' button, nothing happens. How can I fix it?
I tried to disable all Chrome extensions and it worked.

What debugging techniques do you use for iPhone/iPod web development?

I'm working on a web application, and we are targeting the iPhone and iPod Touch. I'm familiar with the debugging tools for FireFox and IE (e.g. Firebug and IE Developer Toolbar), but I can't find anything for the iPod. I am not looking forward to using alert as my main debugging tool, especially when I expect mouse events to be one of the major issues.
Is this really the state of the art? What tools do you recommend?
Also, how similar is the html layout on an iPhone to that of Safari running on Windows? On a Mac?
The iPhone version of Safari includes a debug console that can be very handy. Settings > Safarai > Developer.
You can also use the Simulator in the iPhone SDK. There's no extra debugging, but it's easier than using a physical device all the time.
You can also use the desktop version of Safari for many things.
The web tools that target the iPod Touch and iPhone arenas include
[iPhone Remote Debug Console](
http://code.google.com/p/iphonedebug/)
BlackBaud Simulator for Windows
[MobileSafari Simulator](
http://www.testiphone.com/)
[iPhoney](
http://marketcircle.com/iphoney/)
While WebKit has a remote inspector, it is hard to enable on an actual iOS device (at least without jailbreak) and so most tools for it are simulator-only. iWebInspector looks promising for this, but keep in mind the simulator's WebKit library is not identical to the device's.
That's where weinre comes in. With weinre, you can "debug a web page displayed on your phone from your laptop". How it works is you run its custom HTTP server that hosts two things:
a JavaScript file you include on the page you want to debug
an Inspector page that you load on the machine you want to debug from
You start the server e.g. java -jar Downloads/weinre.jar --boundHost -all- --httpPort 4242 and then put a script tag like <script src="http://weinre-server-name.local:4242/target/target-script-min.js"> in the source code for your webpage and load the inspector by navigating to e.g. http://weinre-server-name.local:4242/client. When you load the target page on an iPhone on your local WiFi connection, the connection will show up in the client page on your mainframe and you can use the Inspector tabs to view/edit the page on the iPhone.
It has some limitations (no Javascript breakpoints and such) and can be a little laggy, but overall it's pretty magic.
There is also a nice tool called iWebInspector
http://www.iwebinspector.com/