- #BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 MAC OS#
- #BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 INSTALL#
- #BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 WINDOWS 10#
- #BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 SOFTWARE#
- #BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 PASSWORD#
$('.msgLogin').html('System unavailable')
#BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 INSTALL#
When install from Store - "System Unavaiable" - ajax post errorĭata: , When deploy direct to mobile - "Invalid Credential" - OK, the ajax works.
#BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 PASSWORD#
You can put anything to user and password Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub can download XAP file working here: Nevertheless provide a test page which uses the latest jQuery Mobile ( If you cannot use jsbin because AJAX is involved in your problem, please To do that, please use our jsbin template create a simple example that reproduces the problem you're experiencing. On Tue, at 5:38 PM, gabrielschulhof order to help you we need to know if the problem you're experiencing is Kindly let me know if you need any additional details. Javascript_TEST.js -> JavaScript referring page.Īlso we are testing the pages in Windows emulator and find the belowĭevice UUID: 546a5032-f490-48c6-8099-e390e356c0e9
#BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 WINDOWS 10#
Windows 10 and Outlook 2016 are not supported. x for the initial transfer of data to your BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
#BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 SOFTWARE#
It totally lost the ability to run both DOS and CP/M-86 programs equally. The sub directories were virtual, I think, so DOS Plus didn’t have MS-DOS’ same directory depth limitation.ĭOS Plus 2.x is another beast. The AUX device comes from CP/M and is equal to COM1 in DOS. (Ironically, MS-DOS and PC-DOS were supporting CP/M stuff themselves. It could read both FAT and CP/M file systems, also. That one was mature enough to run GEM 1.x, which was a normal DOS application (it could run with the supplied MS-DOS 3.x as well)ĭOS Plus 1.x really was CP/M-86 in disguise, I think. Posted in Retrocomputing Tagged 8080, CP/M, open source, z80 Post navigationĭOS Plus 1.2 (not 2.1) was available for rare systems like the BBC Master 512, but also sold with the popular PC compatibles Amstrad/Schneider PC1512 and PC1640 and included an internal DOS 2.x emulator named “PC MODE”. Brush up your command line skills, and give it a go! But with the more recent increased popularity of dedicated retrocomputing platforms such as the RC2014 it’s become a more common sight in our community. Its source has been available in some form with a few strings for a long time now, but now we have confirmation from Digital Research’s successor company that it’s now available without restrictions on where it can be distributed.įor years it was something an operating system that had been bypassed by the hardware and hacker communities, as the allure of GNU/Linux was stronger and most available CP/M capable machines were also 1980s 8-bit gaming platforms. Digital Research’s CP/M ran initially on Intel 8080-based machines before losing out to MS-DOS as IBM’s choice for their PC, and then gradually faded away over the 1980s. But the daddy of desktop computing, the OS that put word-processors and spreadsheets in 1970s offices and had a huge influence on what followed, isn’t among that list.
#BLACKBERRY LINK NOT WORKING ON WINDOWS 7 MAC OS#
It’s easy to think of the earlier history of desktop computing operating systems in terms of DOS, Windows, and Mac OS with maybe a bit of AmigaOS, TOS, or RiscOS thrown in.