Unable to start program. The Microsoft Visual Studio Debugging Monitor (MSVSMON.EXE) does not appear to be running on the remote computer Please see Help for assistance on configuring remote debugging"
I ran into this with Zone Alarm as well. In my case I added an exception for the Visual Studio 12.0 folder in Program Files and another exception for both devenv.exe and msvsmon.exe (in the Remote Debugger\x64 folder) as Trusted Processes. I don't get the Windows message box about the operation taking to long anymore.
If you have IDM (Internet Download Manager) installed, and if you have enabled "Advanced Browser Integration" in it, do disable that "Advanced Browser Integration" feature. It shall solve the problem. It did for me..!!!
The solution posted by chaithanya itself may also solve the problem by installing the Remote Tools for Visual Studio. But I didn't want to give it a change to break the remote abilities I need in Visual Studio Tools for Apache Cordova for iOS apps.
I had this problem when running a VPN and it went away after turning the VPN off. It has something to do with how MS does 64-bit same machine debugging, the network plays a role and VPN interferes. I looked this problem up on the MS site and it was acknowledged as a bug, but I'm guessing not enough of us need this to work for a fix to come along. I just turned my VPN off, not a problem for me. (VS2013)
I gather this has become a problem with Firefox, so I'm late to the game. I want to use Silverlight 64-bit with a mapping program that requires it, but have not been able to get Silverlight to work with Firefox (I have 64-bit Firefox v59.x and W10). Anyone out there have a suggestion?
Only the Firefox 52 ESR still allows other NPAPI Plugins to run besides the Flash Player Plugin from Adobe. For Windows if you use Win64 Firefox 52 ESR then only the 64-bit Flash Player and Silverlight NPAPI Plugins will run.
Microsoft Visual Studio 2022 introduced a bug causing build errors when a web application references a Silverlight application.
Please vote up the issue here: MSBUILD : error : Copying file failed. Index (zero based) must be greater than or equal to zero and less than the size of the argument list
As a work-around, perform the following steps in the web application:
This may be caused by the compiler failing to load a 32-bit assembly reference when compiling the silverlight project targeting "Any CPU" in a 64-bit process. As a work-around, force MSBuild to load task assemblies in the x86 architecture:
There is a similar post...but mine is freezing at silverlight, also at 0%. I tried installing keysight IO, suggested in that similar post, but not work. I tried both NIVISA 18.5 and 17.0...neither worked.
Many thanks. Later our IT solved the problem. Some of our security software keep blocking NI install. After they uninstall the security software (later installed them back), the installing goes well. Thanks again.
I was trying to create silverlight project in my laptop and I got error that you need to install Silverlight Developer environment, this was strange to me because I had silverlight developers runtime environment installed on my machine. I clicked on the link provided by visual studio 2010 and downloaded it again and when I tried to install it I got this error
I am using a SQL Server 2016 SP1 developer copy on a local machine not AZURE to learn MDS. Also, my client is WIN10 64-bit with Chrome & Edge and the latest version of SilverLight 5. I have uninstalled the SilverLight and reinstalled it. Upgraded to SP! and migrated the database to SP1. SilverLight blocks the preview mode. Not sure what to do next?
The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence
- Martin Rees
The absence of consumable DDL, sample data and desired results is, however, evidence of the absence of my response
- Phil Parkin
Thank you for your suggestion, it works as you stated with IE. I wanted to work with a the latest Microsoft browser which is the default for WIN10 as per this article and IE will be deprecated.. It is the work around that I needed but it is a glitch in the MDS product UI. Again, thanks.
-us/insider/wiki/insider_internet-insider_ie/how-to-locate-and-open-internet-explorer-in/4b067f8b-a0dc-4fba-9e63-00fb14ea82e8
Windows 10 represents a major revision of the client operating system; one major change is how we browse and experience the Internet. Windows 10 will include a new web browser called Microsoft Edge. This will be the new default web browser in Windows 10, replacing the well known Internet Explorer which will celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2015. Even though Microsoft will be the default web browser in Windows 10, Internet Explorer will still be around for legacy purposes. In this article, we take a look at how to access Internet Explorer if you still need to use it.
Please note, Windows 10 Enterprise and Windows 10 Pro LTSB (Long Term Service Branch) editions do not include Internet Explorer. Windows 10 LTSB editions are normally available to volume license customers. Your only option is to use a non LTSB version of Windows 10. This will require speaking with your IT department or Desktop Support Technician within your organization. Windows 10 LTSB editions do not include Microsoft Edge either. Phil Parkin
Mozilla launches a stable version of Firefox 64-bit for the Microsoft Windows operating system this month in silent fashion. While it is available for download, it is not yet listed on the organization's official download site.
Firefox users can download the 64-bit version from Mozilla's Download Archive though. Since it is the first official stable release, it is likely that Mozilla wanted to monitor bugs and other issues for a release cycle.
The reason given is that streaming services such as Amazon or Netflix, as well as several local streaming providers such as Eurosport, Videoload, Sky Go or Magine TV use Silverlight exclusively or optionally.
Mozilla plans to integrate support for Silverlight in 64-bit versions of Firefox in Firefox 43 or 44. It is not clear right now if the organization manages to add support of Silverlight in Firefox 43, to be released on December 15, 2015, or Firefox 44, which will be released on January 26, 2016.
It is interesting to note that Firefox is one of the few mainstream browsers left that supports Silverlight. Neither Google with its Chrome browser nor Microsoft's new browser Edge support Silverlight anymore.
This leaves users with two options. First, they can block updates of the browser to retain plugin functionality, or keep an older copy around for that purpose, or they may use a browser that won't discontinue support. Pale Moon for instance won't follow Mozilla, Google and Microsoft according to a post on the official forum.
I went to -in/windows-10/about in both browsers. In Chrome I could see the content on the webpage perfectly. In Firefox it asked me to install Microsoft Silverlight. I'm surprised that on Chrome it didn't ask me to install Silverlight.
From what I gather, pipelight runs silverlight using wine in the background somehow but this not only works, it works better than silverlight does in Windows and installs as a plugin to your linux browser (not a wine workaround). Tested on netflix and the timewarner cable tv app.
Windows 10 introduces several new capabilities and also combines features from both Windows 7 and Windows 8. Use the resources below to learn how Windows 10 impacts engineers and scientists and understand best practices for developing engineering and scientific applications on Windows 10.
Windows 10 reintroduces the Start menu, which changes how you access NI products. After installing NI software using NI Package Manager, you can find your applications listed under the alphabetized 'N' section of the All Apps menu. All secondary shortcuts are under the NI section of the menu.
Windows 10 32-bit can run on either x86 or x64 hardware. Similar to Windows XP 32-bit, Windows 10 32-bit provides access only to 32-bit addresses. As a result, even though Windows 10 32-bit will run on x64 hardware, it is limited to using 4 gigabytes of RAM. Windows 10 32-bit cannot run 64-bit versions of drivers or software designed to run natively on 64-bit operating systems.
Windows 10 64-bit can be installed only on x64 hardware. This version of the operating system allows software to use 64-bit addresses to access hardware and can therefore access much larger memory spaces. In order to run successfully on Windows 10 64-bit, all drivers must have native 64-bit support. However, most 32-bit software applications can run within a Windows 10 64-bit emulation layer.
Some NI components require Microsoft Silverlight to function properly. The default browser in Windows 10, Microsoft Edge, does not support Silverlight. Google Chrome also no longer supports Silverlight. Windows 10 includes Internet Explorer 11 for backward compatibility, which supports Silverlight. All Silverlight pages launched from MAX will use Internet Explorer, but Silverlight-based pages launched manually using a default browser that does not support Silverlight, such as Edge or Chrome, will fail to open. For more information about using Silverlight-based pages on Windows 10, refer to KnowledgeBase Remote Front Panels, NI Network Browser, and the Web Interface (WIF) Do Not Work in Google Chrome Version 42 or Higher
Performing a repair on NI software after upgrading to Windows 10 can result in a loss of access to hardware associated with repaired drivers. To restore the NI device drivers to a working state, perform a repair on the affected device drivers.
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