

- Activepresenter limit attempt install#
- Activepresenter limit attempt software#
- Activepresenter limit attempt zip#
For the tasks required in this course KE is more than sufficient, We have not considered the cloud server and therefore the installation proposed here do not use the MySQL database. The paid components add online editors in the style of Office 365. So, basically, the free version provides a file manager and a cloud server. Paid plugins add editors while the free distribution contains only bare viewers for the usual file types.

KODExplorer is distributed with a set of plugins that provides web viewers for most common file types like. KODBox is a complete cloud system that includes KE. The most recent version is distributed as part of the KODBox package. KODExlporer (KE) is open source and is written in PHP.
Activepresenter limit attempt install#
In this webinar we install KODExplorer onto a shared webserver.

Indeed not all managers do all the operations very well on every provider. This apparent confusion is to offer several examples in the hope that at least one works. Also the file managers are not always the same. All the webinars install a file manager on different providers. This is just one of several webinars on this argument.
Activepresenter limit attempt software#
So, in this webinar, we point out three pieces of software i.e., Filezilla and a couple of file managers, that can be easily installed by your students and can act as a wrapper providing a uniform look and feel for all your webinar operations dealing with file handling. (This happens very often, really don't know why!) Similarly you might want to have different students to use different providers but following all students that way is going to be an headache during your lessons. You might not want to have webinars that can become rather obsolete and useless when your provider changes the GUI of the service they run. All these trivial operations can be done in some environment like CPanel whose look and feel heavily depends on the provider you are using.
Activepresenter limit attempt zip#
So you are left with the task of showing your students how to, e.g., rename a file on the server, zip and download a folder, upload a file and things like that. Most of the time it is better to show them directly what these scripts are supposed to do. Second, probably your learners will be left with a bunch of scripts from you, probably, they do not understand. Nevertheless using Jenkins will require some non-trivial scripting ability from you to prepare scripts for the intended operations. The most elegant way to do this is to use some CI/CD tool like Jenkins. Sometimes, in a course, we want to show some installation or maintenance operation that basically is a sequence of trivial file operations.
