Cherrytree is really a good tool for me, but there is no versions for mac.I have tried all ways I know, but with no lucky.Is there someone who installed cherrytree on macOS successfully?
You need to download the Windows version of CherryTree and install it using PlayOnMac. It is a wine implementation and can be used to run a lot of Windows applications.
I hope there will be a native Mac OS X client in the future.
Hope this helps, let me know.
Regards,
I just bought the new Dell XPS 13 Developer edition which came preinstalled with ubuntu 14.04.
After the initial boot it seemed a bit slow, but then it updated and worked fine, then later the same day seemed to slow down again.
Even running programs like eclipse it seems very laggy on, which is odd. As the specifications should be fine;
16gb Ram
i7-6560U cpu
64-bit
500gb ssd.
I'm not sure what to post to help, so any suggestions would be great.
Thank you!
Check what is using much system load using the command top.
You can also use htop which is easier to read.
For that install it using the following command:
sudo apt-get install htop
Have you tried reinstalling Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS on your computer?
In future, please use the Ask Ubuntu forums for such questions.
I had a similar issue in my lenovo thinkpad with i7 and 16GB. pycharm and android studio was exteremely slow and it was almost not usable for any development. Even it took a while for the terminal to start.
Finally I found a solution for my issue. I needed to disable "speed step" feature in BIOS.
Please read the following blog for more information
http://www.williambharding.com/blog/technology/fixed-my-i7-intel-dell-laptop-is-ridiculously-slow/
I want to learn real-time scheduling, so our professor asked us to change sched.c. But I even find it. My OS is ubuntu LTS 12.04. I searched it online. Someone said there is no sched.c in ubuntu. Is he right? What file does ubuntu use to schedule? tick-sched.c? BTW: I am a linux rookie, could some tell me where I need to start? Thanks a lot.
Has anyone got a Mac VM working on OpenStack? It is possible on KVM with a patch so the theory is there http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~somlo/OSXKVM/ but has anyone done it and how maintainable is it?
I would try virtualbox first. Here is a guide:
http://www.macbreaker.com/2014/05/os-x-mavericks-in-virtualbox-with-niresh.html
Vmware patches from my experience are most compatible but after looking over what is described in the post, I'd say it looks solid. Honestly, even though it should work, expect a different set of issues with KVM compared to native.
I'm trying to learn to code in Objective C, but I am not ready to commit to purchasing a Mac for just this purpose, seeing as I have a good Dell laptop. My computer has VMware installed on it, but I do not know how to actually go through the steps, and I do not know what I need to install or purchase(if absolutely necessary). Eventually, I hope to get a Mac, so this won't be needed, but until then, I want to find a way to compile Objective C so I can actually learn how to use it. Thanks.
While it is technically possible, I'll tell you from experience:
To run Xcode and the iOS Simulator, you will need to have MacOS running. Oficially it only runs on Apple Hardware, buuut, you can always use virtualizers and Hackintosh. There are plenty of good tutorials online if you choose this method.
My advice: DON'T do it!
When I started to develop iOS apps, I had a Windows PC, but after trying lots of different approaches to virtualize MacOS, with none I had great results. I bought a MacBook on a sale, and it's just a better iOS development experience overall. It's priceless not to have to deal with driver searching and compatibility issues.
First virtualize MacOS X, inside then iOS with XCode. See http://www.macbreaker.com/2012/07/mountain-lion-virtualbox.html
Yes you can, you need to virtualize OSX inside you Windows, and then use XCode as the other stated, however it doesen't work with nearly all AMD CPU's but i think Dell uses mostly Intel. And a Mac costs alot. For example i don't have money for one, the cheapest one costs $1,600 where i come from, but if you are going to get a Mac, i would wait for that.
But they really are expensive, and i only need a Macbook for debugging.
[Assuming you already have the mac installation image or vmware file]
Sadly Vmware does not include support for mac in it's latest versions
So you'll have to patch(aka Vmware Unlocker for OS X) it.
Follow this link http://www.insanelymac.com/forum/files/file/20-vmware-unlocker-for-os-x/ (you'll be required to set up an account)
Or alternatively you can download the VirtualBox(https://www.virtualbox.org/)
Happy Coding
Use virtualbox instead of VMWare. If it does'nt work, install the extension pack for virtualbox.