can I use Restsharp Library for commercial purposes in windows phone apps.
I want to use this for uploading the file to server and reading the response using httpwebrequest is quite complicated.
I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advice, but the answer is yes.
RestSharp is licensed under the Apache v2 license. So you can do anything that the license allows.
https://github.com/restsharp/RestSharp/blob/master/LICENSE.txt
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I am planning to make a soft phone JQuery plug-in with the new Skype web-SDK.
It is still unclear to me if the web-sdk depends on UCWA or that it can be used with the classic UCMA as well, and does it require Office365 for on-premise UCMA / UCWA machines like a cloud hosted instance.
Also what is the current availability of UCWA?
Thanks in advance.
Has been recently announced, during Build 2016 conference, that UCWA as well as Skype Web SDK is now available also for Office 365 customers.
UCMA is still only available to customers with on-premises Lync 2013 / SfB installation
Refer to this documentation: Skype Developer Platform
I may have found the answer here skype document.
What’s worth mentioning here is that UCMA is still not supported in Skype for Business Online, and at launch the Skype Web SDK will not be supported Online. Also, only Basic support for the Web SDK will be available in Lync 2013. I don’t know what that means exactly, but when I find out I’ll let you know!
Still a bit vague for my taste
Enzo - Your reference is more than a year old. We have launched Skype Web SDK for online. It depends on UCWA, which is also now available for online.
I'm involved in a project with many others companies. We started to develop our systems at the same time but only at the end the communication problem was taken into account.
I've developed my system on Linux with Mono (Linux is mandatory for me). I have to communicate with a Windows .Net system which is exposing a Wcf web services. Unfortunately they told me only now they are using wsHttpBinding and I've just discovered that this communication protocol is not supported by Mono.
I'm here to ask if there is a way to communicate with that web service. They are not going to change the wsHttpBinding because is used by many other companies. I cannot change my OS and my code base is too big to leave Mono now. I can only add a layer (always on Linux) between my Mono implementation and their web services.
Any suggestions?
Microsoft has recently released the .NET source code as MIT licence (open source).
This means that, if something is not supported by Mono, you can just bring the code yourself and incorporate it, so that it becomes officially supported.
Some Mono developers have actually been doing this the past weeks to incorporate things that they had not implemented yet. So you could bring the wsHttpBinding along to Mono. An example of such a change is this commit.
Short question:
Does the Windows Store allow applications that obtain DLLs or other low-level resources not packaged at compile time? Is there a requirement either by Windows Phone or Microsoft that requires DLLs to be signed? If so, can I use a DLL in my application that is signed by another developer?
Why I'm asking/explanation:
I'm working an an application for Android that allows users to download extensions (like themes), and I'd like to port this to Windows Phone.
I have determined that it's not possible for my app to utilize libraries or other resources of other applications downloaded from the Windows Store. (Please correct me if this is not always the case)
The workaround I'm considering is an in-app download center for other resources specific to this application. I'm wondering if a downloads for this app, specifically DLLs, can be used in my application. These DLLs would be developed by 3rd party developers, so I see that signing might be an issue.
The store specifically prohibits any additions / modifications after the app has been purchased. So although it may technically be possible, they won't certify it.
This makes sense if you think about certification . If they would allow this, it would make certification a moot point, since you would just publish a basic app, and afterwards side-load the uncertified part.
Can anyone provide a suggestion on the best way to use Exchange Services 2007 in a Mac application using Cocoa? I need to access Inbox mail messages and their headers to parse the information I need.
I have written an implementation in my .NET application, but of course .NET provides some nice libraries to handle all the complex types and such.
Thanks in advance.
Cocoa doesn't really have any decent SOAP libraries available that I'm aware of. You could either try to access Exchange via IMAP if it's enabled for your server (e.g. with MailCore) or embed another language with better SOAP support (e.g. Java, Python). Here's an example of using Java/JAXWS to talk to EWS.
Microsoft has an EWS Java API but it was apparently so poor-quality that they pulled it. However, there's a link to the download on that page if you want to try it anyway, and it's open source so you could potentially fix any bugs you ran into.
Doc,
I came across this EWS OSX Widget in my search for the same thing. It would be good to know if this works for you.
http://ewsmacwidget.codeplex.com/releases/view/16559
I need an Open Source solution & tutorial for creating mobile streaming server that can stream video on 3gp (3gpp) format, i have tried using Helix DNA Server, but it's free version only allow real media not 3gp.
I have heard about DSS (Darwin Streaming Server) but i can't found any Windows binaries (compiled exe) for that, and Catra Streaming server package only confused me more since i can't found any file required for Catra (setting, etc are missing on their package).
PS: Actually i need some sort of guide for setting DSS or Catra on Windows (especially Server 2003)
You may want to try VLC http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
I can't vouch for the streaming server, but the player works well, and 3gp is supported.
But this isn't a programming question.
DSS Windows binaries are here:
http://dss.macosforge.org/post/previous-releases/
If you're target mobile devices support flash you can stream 3gp from Red5. If they don't support flash, but they do allow HTML5 you could still use Red5 or pretty much any Java EE container server.