Is Spdy ( speedy ) for windows available? - windows

I have already searched for possible install of spdy under windows but no success until now.
Trying to install mod_spdy on apache under windows, official SPDY mod site provides detail for linux but no help for windows does anybody know how to set one up on windows 8 or 7 ?
If anybody is already using it, like this post

Jetty has a SPDY server and client, and being written in Java works without problems on Windows.

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How to install windows updates on multiple clients using YUM on CentOS server

I need to do a installation of windows updates (OS and Microsoft Security Essentials) on multiple clients using Cent-OS Server. I'm not very familiar with Linux systems and I cant find an appropriate tutorial On the internet.
Give OPSI a try, this is an OpenSource Deployment Solution which works on CentOS:
http://www.opsi.org/
This is an integrated system to deploy full installation as well as simple updates or rollouts.
yum installs RedHat/CentOS/Fedora RPM packages on RedHat/CentOS/Fedora systems. It doesn't have anything to do with Windows. It doesn't understand exe files or anything like that.
I'm not even sure where to begin to understand what the question you are actually trying to ask is... unless your question is really just as confused as it sounds and you are failing to understand the difference between package managed linux systems and Windows systems.

Siebel 7.8.2.16 on Windows 8/IE10

Does anyone know if Siebel 7.8 is supported on IE10 and above? One application is about to be sunset, but will continue for a few months, but the desktops will be upgraded to Windows 8.
Any link to sources from Oracle for supporting or not supporting IE10 will be appreciated, since the official docs (http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E11886_01/siebel/books/SRSP78/SRSP78.pdf) do not talk about Windows 8 support
The last supported platform for High Interactivity mode is Windows 7 and Internet Explorer 8 (that is mentioned in document you are linked to the question). As far as I know there is no option to use Windows 8 with IE8, so the plain answer is: no, you cannot use it to access Siebel applications. Still if you find a way to install IE8 there is a little chance that it will work. Consider using some type of virtualization (Windows 8 Pro includes HyperX VM software) or any other methods.

mod_pagespeed for Apache 2.4 and Windows Server 2008 r2

mod_pagespeed is stable now but there's no version for Windows. Does anybody compiled the module for Windows successfully?
Thanks!
mod_pagespeed does not currently work on Windows. But there is a PageSpeed port to ISS called IISpeed: http://www.iispeed.com/.
We currently have the mod_pagespeed module compiling and loading into Apache on Windows on a dev machine. However - we first need to fix a few things before it can be used as intended and released to the public.
Once we have it working correctly, we will offer a free download. Keep an eye on http://www.iispeed.com/ - we will announce it over there in a few weeks.

I have a windows pc, can I develop with LAMP?

I have a pc running windows but I want to use a linux server. Is there a way for me to develop my website on my computer before I rent space on a server? Also its probably important to note that I have no linux experience. Should I just stick with wamp?
Unless you specifically and purposely use .NET features in your PHP Application, then an application developed in WAMP will work fine on a LAMP Server as long as you have included all the same PHP plugins.
PHP is independent from Linux or Windows. 99.9% of the time you have to knowingly use features from the host OS.
You should try ubuntu in a virtualbox, there are lots of well written guides that'll get you up and running.
For best performance, use coLinux. Install a linux distro like ubuntu (easier for beginners) and you should be ok.
Yes. I have developed and maintained a website like this before. My development environment was WAMP and the server was a LAMP shared server. Shouldn't be a problem till your site is using fairly basic libraries and they are available both for windows/linux.
However as others mentioned, its wiser to have the development environment as close possible to the production environment. You don't hit any surprises that way. And hey its not difficult and involves no cost:
You can use dual boot to have linux as other operating system.
Depending on your machine, you can just install VirtualBox and install a Linux VM.

WAMP or XAMPP for Windows XP Professional

I have Windows XP Professional as my OS.
Which of the following solutions is best?
WAMP
XAMPP
Separate installation
I'd recommend WAMP, as it's very easy to set up.
XAMPP is more feature rich though, as it includes Tomcat, and a slightly newer version of PHP.
Here's a simple breakdown of what's included in each:
http://www.wampserver.com/en/
http://www.apachefriends.org/en/xampp-windows.html
I would actually suggest that users go for XAMPP server.
Reason for choosing XAMPP over WAMP
XAMPP has a beginner friendly interface with simple on/off buttons to start Apache and MySQL services. Whereas the latter has more options but it's interface is jam-packed which proves confusing for beginners.
XAMPP supports FileZilla so you can easily upload your local work onto your online server. It also comes with TOMCAT and newer version of PHP ( recommended for PHP Programmers )
XAMPP has more extensions to it compared to wamp.
You can check out my article on xampp and wamp comparison to get a more detailed understanding:
Wamp, faster and more noob friendly. Easy to configure and easy to install.
WAMP is easier to use in my opinion, but XAMPP may be more feature-rich.
Seeing as you're asking the question, though, I'd recommend WAMP.
You may also want to consider using BitNami WampStack. It is a free all-in-one installer that includes Apache, PHP, phpMyAdmin, MySQL and a GUI management tool for the servers.
It is similar to XAMPP, WAMPServer, etc. in that regard but with some differences: We keep it up to date (XAMPP is also kept fairly up to date, WAMPServer has not been updated since 2010 at the time of writing this posting). Also, any of the all-in-one Apache bundles are
Windows specific. We are multiplatform, meaning that you can use the same environment across multiple operating systems (Mac, Linux, Windows). We find this very useful internally, since our designer works on Windows and the rest of us run on Linux or OS X.
Also, we have found that a lot users want to setup XAMPP for local development on top of Joomla!, Drupal or Wordpress for developing plugins, themes, etc. and that is why we created all-in-one packages that include Apache, MySQL, PHP and those applications pre-installed. We also have Rails and Django versions of the stacks if that's what you are developing on.
Give it a try (it is free!) and let us know what you think :)
I use Visual-AMP & Visual-NMP, It is like the IIS,
Green portable, requires no installation. Stop related services that are running the program, you can move the directory.

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