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Staroffice 6.0 Software Setting up Database Connections
StarOffice™ 6.0 Software Setting Up Database Connections Sun Microsystems, Inc. 901 San Antonio Road Palo Alto, CA 94303 U.S.A. 650-960-1300 Part No. 817-0364-05 September 2002, Revision A Copyrights and Trademarks Copyright © 2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara, California 95054, U.S.A. All rights reserved. Sun Microsystems, Inc. has intellectual property rights relating to technology embodied in the product that is described in this document. In particular, and without limitation, these intellectual property rights may include one or more of the U.S. patents listed at http://www.sun.com/patents and one or more additional patents or pending patent applications in the U.S. and in other countries. This document and the product to which it pertains are distributed under licenses restricting their use, copying, distribution, and decompilation. No part of the product or of this document may be repro- duced in any form by any means without prior written authorization of Sun and its licensors, if any. Third-party software, including font technology, is copyrighted and licensed from Sun suppliers. This product is based in part on the work of the Independent JPEG Group, The FreeType Project and the Catharon Typography Project. Portions Copyright 2000 SuSE, Inc. Word for Word Copyright © 1996 Inso Corp. International CorrectSpell spelling correction system Copyright © 1995 by Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved. Source code for portions of this product are available under the Mozilla Public License at the following sites: http://www.mozilla.org/, http://www.jclark.com/, and http://www.gingerall.com. -
Oracle® Enterprise Manager Ops Center Security
Oracle® Enterprise Manager Ops Center Security 12c Release 4 (12.4.0.0.0) F17675-01 April 2019 Oracle Enterprise Manager Ops Center Security, 12c Release 4 (12.4.0.0.0) F17675-01 Copyright © 2007, 2019, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Primary Author: Krithika Gangadhar This software and related documentation are provided under a license agreement containing restrictions on use and disclosure and are protected by intellectual property laws. Except as expressly permitted in your license agreement or allowed by law, you may not use, copy, reproduce, translate, broadcast, modify, license, transmit, distribute, exhibit, perform, publish, or display any part, in any form, or by any means. Reverse engineering, disassembly, or decompilation of this software, unless required by law for interoperability, is prohibited. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice and is not warranted to be error-free. If you find any errors, please report them to us in writing. If this is software or related documentation that is delivered to the U.S. Government or anyone licensing it on behalf of the U.S. Government, then the following notice is applicable: U.S. GOVERNMENT END USERS: Oracle programs, including any operating system, integrated software, any programs installed on the hardware, and/or documentation, delivered to U.S. Government end users are "commercial computer software" pursuant to the applicable Federal Acquisition Regulation and agency- specific supplemental regulations. As such, use, duplication, disclosure, modification, and adaptation of the programs, including any operating system, integrated software, any programs installed on the hardware, and/or documentation, shall be subject to license terms and license restrictions applicable to the programs. -
Lecture 1: Introduction to UNIX
The Operating System Course Overview Getting Started Lecture 1: Introduction to UNIX CS2042 - UNIX Tools September 29, 2008 Lecture 1: UNIX Intro The Operating System Description and History Course Overview UNIX Flavors Getting Started Advantages and Disadvantages Lecture Outline 1 The Operating System Description and History UNIX Flavors Advantages and Disadvantages 2 Course Overview Class Specifics 3 Getting Started Login Information Lecture 1: UNIX Intro The Operating System Description and History Course Overview UNIX Flavors Getting Started Advantages and Disadvantages What is UNIX? One of the first widely-used operating systems Basis for many modern OSes Helped set the standard for multi-tasking, multi-user systems Strictly a teaching tool (in its original form) Lecture 1: UNIX Intro The Operating System Description and History Course Overview UNIX Flavors Getting Started Advantages and Disadvantages A Brief History of UNIX Origins The first version of UNIX was created in 1969 by a group of guys working for AT&T's Bell Labs. It was one of the first big projects written in the emerging C language. It gained popularity throughout the '70s and '80s, although non-AT&T versions eventually took the lion's share of the market. Predates Microsoft's DOS by 12 years! Lecture 1: UNIX Intro The Operating System Description and History Course Overview UNIX Flavors Getting Started Advantages and Disadvantages Lecture Outline 1 The Operating System Description and History UNIX Flavors Advantages and Disadvantages 2 Course Overview Class Specifics 3 -
Adventures with Illumos
> Adventures with illumos Peter Tribble Theoretical Astrophysicist Sysadmin (DBA) Technology Tinkerer > Introduction ● Long-time systems administrator ● Many years pointing out bugs in Solaris ● Invited onto beta programs ● Then the OpenSolaris project ● Voted onto OpenSolaris Governing Board ● Along came Oracle... ● illumos emerged from the ashes > key strengths ● ZFS – reliable and easy to manage ● Dtrace – extreme observability ● Zones – lightweight virtualization ● Standards – pretty strict ● Compatibility – decades of heritage ● “Solarishness” > Distributions ● Solaris 11 (OpenSolaris based) ● OpenIndiana – OpenSolaris ● OmniOS – server focus ● SmartOS – Joyent's cloud ● Delphix/Nexenta/+ – storage focus ● Tribblix – one of the small fry ● Quite a few others > Solaris 11 ● IPS packaging ● SPARC and x86 – No 32-bit x86 – No older SPARC (eg Vxxx or SunBlades) ● Unique/key features – Kernel Zones – Encrypted ZFS – VM2 > OpenIndiana ● Direct continuation of OpenSolaris – Warts and all ● IPS packaging ● X86 only (32 and 64 bit) ● General purpose ● JDS desktop ● Generally rather stale > OmniOS ● X86 only ● IPS packaging ● Server focus ● Supported commercial offering ● Stable components can be out of date > XStreamOS ● Modern variant of OpenIndiana ● X86 only ● IPS packaging ● Modern lightweight desktop options ● Extra applications – LibreOffice > SmartOS ● Hypervisor, not general purpose ● 64-bit x86 only ● Basis of Joyent cloud ● No inbuilt packaging, pkgsrc for applications ● Added extra features – KVM guests – Lots of zone features – -
Mysql Query Browser Mysql Query Browser This Is a Translation of the Mysql Query Browser Manual That Can Be Found at Dev.Mysql.Com
MySQL Query Browser MySQL Query Browser This is a translation of the MySQL Query Browser Manual that can be found at dev.mysql.com. The original MySQL Query Browser Manual is in English, and this translation is not necessarily as up to date as the English version. Esta es una traduccion del manual de MySQL Query Browser el cual puede ser encontrado en dev.mysql.com. El Manual original de MySQL Query Browser se encuentra en Inglés, y esta traduccion no necesariamente es tan actualizada como la versión en Inglés. Edwin Cruz <ecruz @ medel.com.mx> ha traducido este manual del Inglés. El es gerente de sistemas y vive en Aguascalientes, México. Edwin cumplió su educación en 2005 con grado de ingenieria en ciencias de la computa- ción. Como desarrollador, Edwin ha estado trabajando con LAMP Stack por tres años. Antes de obtener su empleo actual, en una compañia de transporte, Edwin trabajo en Texas Instruments Mexico. Resumen Este es el Manual de MySQL Query Browser Documento generado en: 2010-03-14 (revision: 542) Copyright © 1997-2007 MySQL AB, 2008-2010 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. U.S. Government Rights - Commercial software. Govern- ment users are subject to the Sun Microsystems, Inc. standard license agreement and applicable provisions of the FAR and its supplements. Use is sub- ject to license terms. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, Java, Solaris, StarOffice, MySQL Enterprise Monitor 2.0, MySQL logo™ and MySQL™ are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. UNIX is a registered trademark in the U.S. -
Chapter 8 Getting Started with Base
Getting Started Guide Chapter 8 Getting Started with Base OpenOffice.org’s Database Component Copyright This document is Copyright © 2008 by its contributors as listed in the section titled Authors. You may distribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later, or the Creative Commons Attribution License, version 3.0 or later. All trademarks within this guide belong to their legitimate owners. Authors Dan Lewis Iain Roberts Magnus Adielsson Jean Hollis Weber Feedback Maintainer: Dan Lewis Please direct any comments or suggestions about this document to: [email protected] Acknowledgments As the maintainer of this document, I would like to personally thank the other authors of it. Without them, this document would not have the quality it does. Neither would it contain as much information. Iain Roberts and Magnus Adielsson offered many sound suggestions on content as well as format. Jean Hollis Weber with many years of technical writing experience has suggested many changes which have made this document much more understandable. Special thanks also go to those who have translated this document into other languages so that non-English speaking people have access to this information. Publication date and software version Published 13 October 2008. Based on OpenOffice.org 3.0. You can download an editable version of this document from http://oooauthors.org/en/authors/userguide3/published/ Contents Copyright...............................................................................................2 -
System Virtualization Support in Sun Java System Products
SystemVirtualization Support in Sun Java System Products October 2009 This document is maintained by Sun Java System team. Software Products Covered by this Statement This document summarizes Sun support for Sun Java System products when used in conjunction with system virtualization products and features. It applies to Sun products contained in the following Sun Java System suites: ■ Sun GlassFish Portfolio ■ Sun Java Application Platform Suite ■ Sun Java Identity Management Suite ■ Sun Java Composite Application Platform Suite ■ Sun B2B Suite ■ Sun ESB Suite ■ Sun MDM Suite ■ Sun Java Web Infrastructure Suite ■ Sun Java Communications Suite Refer to the Sun Java Enterprise System (Java ES) and Communications Suite product pages for more information on these suites. The Sun Java Availability Suite and Solaris Cluster are not addressed in this support statement. Refer to the Solaris Cluster product information for further details on Solaris Cluster's support for operating system virtualization. Introduction A core capability of system virtualization offerings is the ability to execute multiple operating system (OS) instances on shared hardware. Functionally, an application deployed to an OS hosted in a virtualized environment is generally unaware that the underlying platform has been virtualized. Sun performs testing of its Sun Java System products on select system virtualization and OS combinations to help validate that the Sun Java System products continue to function on properly sized and configured virtualized environments as they do on non-virtualized systems. System Resource Sizing The combination of being able to deploy multiple OS instances and applications on a single system and the ease by which system resources can be allocated to OS instances increases the likelihood of realizing undersized environments for your applications. -
Oracle/Sun Microsystems: the Challenge of Reviewing a Merger Involving Open Source Software
Mergers Oracle/Sun Microsystems: The challenge of reviewing a merger involving open source software Carl-Christian Buhr, Sabine Crome, Adrian Lübbert, Vera Pozzato, Yvonne Simon, Robert Thomas (1) 1. Introduction (1) 2. Oracle, Sun and the IT stack On 21 January 2010 the Commission uncondition- The US company Oracle is a major business soft- ally cleared the planned takeover of Sun Microsys- ware vendor. It develops and distributes enterprise tems (‘Sun’), a software and hardware vendor, by software solutions and related services, including Oracle Corporation (‘Oracle’), one of the world’s middleware, databases and enterprise application leading software companies. The clearance followed software. Sun is active in hardware (servers, desk- an extensive investigation into the database market tops, microelectronics, and storage devices) and where Oracle was the leading proprietary vendor software, including operating systems, Java software and Sun the leading open source vendor. The case development technology, middleware, database soft- also attracted a certain level of public attention and ware and related services. triggered reactions by many parties. The legal test The product offerings of Oracle and Sun can be applied in this case was not based on the acquisi- seen as part of an IT or technology ‘stack’ which tion or strengthening of a dominant position but consists of the various hardware and software on the elimination of an important competitive components necessary for companies to ultimate- force, which would be Sun’s MySQL. The Horizon- ly use business software applications. Hardware tal Merger Guidelines (2) recognize that some firms, products, including servers, storage units and despite having a relatively small market share may client PCs, constitute the first layer. -
DVD Authoring System for Opensolaris Installation and Usage Manual
DVD Authoring System for OpenSolaris Installation and Usage Manual Authors: Igor Struchkov, Vladimir Omelin 1 Preface DVD authoring is one of the most common tasks fulfilled by personal computers nowadays. Modern operating systems, including Linux and Windows, have numerous software packages, both open-source and proprietary, for DVD authoring. OpenSolaris is now aiming at a competitive role in the niche of desktop operating systems and therefore all kinds of end-user applications, such as DVD authoring software, must become available in it. The goal of this project is to build a full-featured DVD authoring system for OpenSolaris by porting available open-source Linux packages and developing all non-portable features. After some preliminary research it became clear that most of back-end work, including audio/video encoding and iso image construction, can be done by command-line utilities that can be ported from Linux to OpenSolaris. On the other hand, a GUI front-end was decided to be built almost from scratch using some ideas from open-source project Varsha. The main idea was to develop the front-end on JavaTM platform, making it as portable as possible. It turned out to be a very good decision in rapidly changing and unstable world of OpenSolaris distributions, and the developed front-end stays functional in any combination of installed packages. 2 1. Architecture of the DVD Authoring System Architecture of the DVD authoring system consists of several components of different kinds. One group of components, called Utilities, consists of command-line tools running in native Solaris environment. This group includes dvdauthor, mjpegtools, ffmpeg, sox and dvd-slideshow. -
Getting Started with Opensolaris 2009.06 - an Introduction for Technical Evaluators
Getting Started with OpenSolaris 2009.06 - An Introduction for Technical Evaluators 3 days starting 25 January at Guillemot Park, Camberley, Surrey To book please make direct contact with Sarah Clayton – [email protected] Course Description This course provides instruction in key features and capabilities of the OpenSolaris 2009.06 Operating System. Topics include installation, network connections, software updates, management of system services, and using Time Slider to create instant backups of the system. Delegates will also be instructed in the basics of system management including file and directory manipulation, viewing system information and managing tasks. Use of role-administration will also be explored. This course does not support the Sun Certified Solaris Associate exam. Who Can Benefit The Getting Started with OpenSolaris 2009.06 course is designed for technically competent individuals who are preparing to evaluate OpenSolaris 2009.06 and are unfamiliar with the UNIX Operating System. Course Length 3 days Prerequisites To succeed fully in this course, students must be able to: • Use basic computer hardware (monitor, keyboard, and mouse) • Input commands and control characters from a keyboard • Have administration experience of another enterprise operating system Skills Gained On completion of this course students will be able to: • Install OpenSolaris and access the internet with ease • Manipulate network connections • Update the software on the system and install new software packages • Understand and control the services -
Oracle® Virtual Desktop Infrastructure Update Guide for Version 3.2.2
Oracle® Virtual Desktop Infrastructure Update Guide for Version 3.2.2 April 2011 Copyright © 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This software and related documentation are provided under a license agreement containing restrictions on use and disclosure and are protected by intellectual property laws. Except as expressly permitted in your license agreement or allowed by law, you may not use, copy, reproduce, translate, broadcast, modify, license, transmit, distribute, exhibit, perform, publish, or display any part, in any form, or by any means. Reverse engineering, disassembly, or decompilation of this software, unless required by law for interoperability, is prohibited. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice and is not warranted to be error-free. If you find any errors, please report them to us in writing. If this software or related documentation is delivered to the U.S. Government or anyone licensing it on behalf of the U.S. Government, the following notice is applicable: U.S. GOVERNMENT RIGHTS Programs, software, databases, and related documentation and technical data delivered to U.S. Government customers are "commercial computer software" or "commercial technical data" pursuant to the applicable Federal Acquisition Regulation and agency-specific supplemental regulations. As such, the use, duplication, disclosure, modification, and adaptation shall be subject to the restrictions and license terms set forth in the applicable Government contract, and, to the extent applicable by the terms of the Government contract, the additional rights set forth in FAR 52.227-19, Commercial Computer Software License (December 2007). Oracle USA, Inc., 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood City, CA 94065. -
Netbeans Crud Desktop Application
Netbeans Crud Desktop Application Is Erny eosinophilic or gabbroitic when disparages some telephoner observes microscopically? Stotious Ephrem caw: he fortify his grumpiness strongly and worshipfully. Is Sampson always cable-laid and impassionate when upraising some guarders very lustily and priggishly? Create GUl ApplicationDesktop Application with Login System CRUD. I often find another need got a quick CRUD application to database Read Update. This document is based on these Ant-based NetBeans CRUD Application Tutorial. CRUD generation and multiple tables in Netbeans IDE Users. The NetBeans Platform provides all of these out of drain box. The user interface for contributing an observable collection on hold because of your free account is a comment form width and try again and choose connect and news. In this tutorial we show about how they develop a web application CRUD. This tutorial covers implementing CRUD database operations using Java Persistence APIJPA for desktop applications. The application to confirm your ui application in five columns of their respective codes to create much. It prompts that when out our support or any sources page of a desktop database. Select the Java category from Projects select Java Application. I create help creating a simple Java database type application. Creating NetBeans Platform CRUD Application Using Maven. To build a basic Angular 11 CRUD application with Reactive Forms that includes. Flutter sqlite crud Persistent storage can be local for caching network calls. Recommend Grails myself included if I need two simple CRUD web framework but cost me. Want to test that provides useful methods in netbeans ide generates a larger application.