Download Activesync For Windows 7 64 Bit - best software for Windows. Microsoft ActiveSync: Microsoft ActiveSync is a nice interface to connect your computer with.
On Fri, 23 Sep 2011 14:42:41 +0000, LightStampCode wrote: The company I contract with is looking at converting all their workstations to Windows 7 OS from XP. Right now with XP, I've written a win32 app that checks to make sure there's an ActiveSync connection and then uses RAPI to copy files from the desktop to the device. Will this work just as well using the Windows Mobile Device Center part of Windows 7? Anyone made the transition and can share what programming changes if any were needed? I have one program that uses RAPI and works fine with ActiveSync and WMDC without rebuilding. I just copied the old executable to a new computer and it worked. That's certainly no guarantee that other programs will work.
Maybe you can find one computer running Windows 7 for testing. If you can't find a whole computer for testing, maybe a virtual one. Now I have a Windows 7 Professional box with a exact virtual version of my old box. I did have to change the computer name etc but I log on to it same as I always did.
Problem now is that when the cable connects it brings up the WMDC first and then I have to click on the USB Attach for the device which is 'unidentified' - it then may try to ActiveSync or not. Right now it's just 'dead in the water'. Anyone running an XP virtual server on their Windows 7 box and successfully able to test the ActiveSync on the XP virtual server? On Tue, 24 Jan 2012 21:18:48 +0000, LightStampCode wrote: Now I have a Windows 7 Professional box with a exact virtual version of my old box. I did have to change the computer name etc but I log on to it same as I always did. Problem now is that when the cable connects it brings up the WMDC first and then I have to click on the USB Attach for the device which is 'unidentified' - it then may try to ActiveSync or not. Right now it's just 'dead in the water'.
Anyone running an XP virtual server on their Windows 7 box and successfully able to test the ActiveSync on the XP virtual server? I don't know what you mean by 'XP virtual server'.
So I'm not sure whether this is relevant: I have Windows 2000 running in each of a few virtual machines on a Windows 7 host, using VMWare. I can definitely connect to ActiveSync on them, and can also connect to WMDC on the host. The bad news is that the connection isn't so automatic as I would like; I usually need to manually make sure the device is connected to the appropriate computer, and then ActiveSync or WMDC starts up.
Your original post says you wanted to run your RAPI program with WMDC under Windows 7, and I replied earlier that I have some RAPI programs that run well with WMDC. Are you trying an XP virtual server because you had trouble with WMDC? I cloned my old XP development box with the the Disk2Vhd application. I then created a new virtual machine on my Windows 7 Pro box.
My plan here has changed somewhat in that I want to be able to do all development maintenance on the XP Virtual Machine I cloned. It keeps me from having to re-install all the obscure third party apps on a new 64bit Windows 7 box.
That said when I connect to the Windows 7 usb WMDC auto runs with the Connected checked. I then close this. So I shut it down and then have to go to my USB tab on my Windows Virtual PC and my Windows CE device shows up as unidentified. I then click the Attach and Active Sync doesn't start running immediately. Click to open and click Get Connected and get a message 'Your device was not detected.' Pull out the USB and put it back in and the WMDC auto runs.
Close it and go to the virtual machine and attach the USB device again - still no ActiveSync connection. Double clicking on the ActiveSync icon gets it trying to connect but it never does. I think part of the problem is not knowing how to effectively use a virtual machine for attached hardware. I was wondering if there;'s a method you use which make utilizing the virtual machine to debug device code?
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012 17:14:24 +0000, LightStampCode wrote: I cloned my old XP development box with the the Disk2Vhd application. I then created a new virtual machine on my Windows 7 Pro box. My plan here has changed somewhat in that I want to be able to do all development maintenance on the XP Virtual Machine I cloned.
Hung Gar - Tiger Crane Form e. What you'd find in our e. The Tiger Crane Form, also known as Fu Hok Seung Ying Kuen in Chinese, combines the ferocity of. Hung Gar Kung Fu. Canonical books. Fu Hok Seung Ying Kuen 'The Tiger and the Crane Double Form' Author's Preface. Lam Sai Wing. Hung Gar Fu Hok Seung Ying Kuen Tiger and Crane Double Form by Lam Sai Wing - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free. Fu hok seung ying kuan. Tiger and Crane Double Form Set (Fu Hok Seung Ying Kyun). [Free.pdf Manual + Instructional Video]. Tiger and Crane Double Form Set (Fu Hok Seung Ying Kyun).
It keeps me from having to re-install all the obscure third party apps on a new 64bit Windows 7 box. Seems like a good choice.
That said when I connect to the Windows 7 usb WMDC auto runs with the Connected checked. I then close this. So I shut it down and then have to go to my USB tab on my Windows Virtual PC and my Windows CE device shows up as unidentified. I then click the Attach and Active Sync doesn't start running immediately. Click to open and click Get Connected and get a message 'Your device was not detected.'
Pull out the USB and put it back in and the WMDC auto runs. Close it and go to the virtual machine and attach the USB device again - still no ActiveSync connection. Double clicking on the ActiveSync icon gets it trying to connect but it never does.
I think part of the problem is not knowing how to effectively use a virtual machine for attached hardware. I was wondering if there;'s a method you use which make utilizing the virtual machine to debug device code? USB can be a pain with virtual machines. If you are never going to use WMDC, I think you can disable its USB connections; that might help a bit. For VMWare, an item in the VMWare menu claims to make USB connections default to the VM with focus, but that doesn't seem to work for me. So I often need to use another menu item to force a connection; the good news is that it disconnects from the host nicely before connecting to the VM, so at least it's only one step for me. On Mon, 26 Mar 2012 13:32:03 +0000, LightStampCode wrote: Hey Bob, Turned out to be a bad connector (hardware) where I was looking at a software/OS problem solution.
I've also found that USB cables are not all alike, and devices may have different 'preferences'. So a USB cable can support ActiveSync for one device but another. Similar for charging. Appreciate the sympathy though.:-) Harry - To reply to me, remove the underscores from my email address (and please indicate which newsgroup and message). Zaret PenFact, Inc. 20 Park Plaza, Suite 400 Boston, MA 02116 www.penfact.com rzaret@penfact.com Useful reading (be sure to read its disclaimer first).