An Official US Navy mobile application, produced by the Navy PMW 240 Program. Navy App Locker mobile app and accompanying website are your.
Update: If you're looking for Fiddler for OS X, check out the new! You can read more about it in this. Over the years, we have received numerous from our user community to provide a Fiddler build for OS X.
While Fiddler for Windows can be used as a proxy for apps running on OS X, there is still great value in being able to run Fiddler on OS X natively. So we have ported the latest version of Fiddler to the Mono Framework which in turn supports OS X—and you can grab the beta bits today. And use our Fiddler forum to for further development. Getting Started with Fiddler for OS X Beta Once you download the new Fiddler for OS X file, follow these steps to get up and running with it:. If you don’t have the Mono framework installed on your Mac, please and install it.
If you already have it installed, please update it to the latest version. If you just installed Mono, please open Terminal and type in. The Mono framework has its own trusted root certificates store.
Currently (at mono version 4.2.4) this store remains empty after installing Mono on OS X. Fiddler uses the certificates in this store to validate the certificates of the websites visited. So you need to populate this store with a set of commonly trusted root authorities to avoid getting constant certificate warnings by Fiddler. The mozroots tool imports trusted authorities from the Mozilla LXR. Extract fiddler-mac.zip to a folder you have write access to. It is recommended that the full path to the Fiddler install folder does not contain any Windows path illegal characters.
( At present it is possible that some Fiddler functionality, e.g. Various file exports or Fiddler Script won’t handle such paths.). Open Terminal and navigate to the folder form 3. Type mono Fiddler.exe in Terminal. While the Oct 2016 Fiddler Release for OS X increases development speed, this approach introduced some limitations, which you will find more details about in the next section. Limitations, Known Problems and Workarounds Unstable UI Fiddler for OS X has the same familiar look that Fiddler for Windows has, however, it is built on top of the open source WinForms Mono implementation. The quality of that implementation is significantly lower than that of Microsoft WinForms, and this results in a less than ideal user experience.
While we were aware of that when we began our work on the macOS version of Fiddler, we chose to go this way so that we can bring OS X support to life faster, not sacrifice the roadmap for Fiddler for Windows and base our future work on real world usage. The most problematic areas in the UI for the beta 1 release are resizing the window and resizing elements inside the window.
That oftentimes results in poor or laggy redrawing of all the affected elements. Quite often, though, hovering over or clicking on the affected areas will fix things.
![App App](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125403635/190129907.png)
When Fiddler is running and ‘decrypt HTTPS traffic’ is on, Safari cannot access some popular sites (Facebook/Twitter/GitHub etc.) Currently this effect is limited to Safari only and it happens only if you visited the site before opening Fiddler. Cleaning the browsing history (just the history not cache or cookies) for the affected site(s) fixes the problem. Our preliminary research shows this problem occurs with websites using TLS versions greater than 1.0. The lack of Mono implementation of TLS 1.1 and 1.2 limits Fiddler for macOS to using TLS 1.0 only. Rather unfortunately, Fiddler TLS 1.0 connection comes after TLS 1.2 connection has been made to the same domain which doesn’t seem to be acceptable to Safari. TLS 1.1 and 1.2 not supported This is a hard limitation introduced by the current state of TLS implementation in the Mono framework.
So Fiddler for OS X cannot use these protocols at present. SSL/TLS Handshake properties not available Fiddler for OS X Beta cannot display these at present. This is work in progress. Auto update The initial version of Fiddler for OS X can be updated only manually. Limited lifespan This version of Fiddler for OS X will work for 60 days and then it will need to be updated.
Try Fiddler for OS X Today We're excited to release our Beta to you— now and be sure to head to the forums to.
Navy Salvor’s Handbook ver 6.0 JMS Naval Architects & Salvage Engineers Copyright 25 August 2010 - 5 June 2013. This version includes 12 easy-to-use calculators based on the most popular formulas in the US Navy Salvor's Handbook! - Estimate Bollard Pull - Hydrostatic Pressure - Flooding Rate - Moment to Trim One Inch - Shaft Diameter - Tons per Inch Immersion (TPI) - GM from Roll Period - Freeing Force - Ground Reaction - Patch Thickness - Change in Draft - Current Force.
The U.S. Navy Supervisor of Salvage wanted to provide to their on-scene salvage personnel, access to their extensive library of marine casualty response know-how; the “hard-earned and sometimes blood-stained” knowledge and lessons-learned from decades of U.S Navy response to all types of commercial and military “ships in distress” around the world, during peacetime and war, and salvage operations of all sizes and scopes. “The Handbook” was intended to be a condensed and “ready-reference” of expert guidance that could fit in the salvor’s hip pocket.
JMS Naval Architects & Salvage Engineers first authored the U.S. Navy Salvor's Handbook for the Supervisor of Salvage in 1990, and since its government publication, JMS has received numerous requests for the handbook from commercial mariners and salvors all over the world. Although the U.S.
Navy has kept the handbook up-to-date with several revisions over the years, they only print enough copies for their salvage personnel. Since the initial publication, JMS has, from time to time, printed small batches of reprints with special permission from the U.S. “Over the years, most salvors have treasured their dog-eared copy, and are slow to lend it outas it has been too long out-of-print and hard to find.” J.R. Wilkins, Director of Ocean Engineering, Supervisor of Salvage and Diving, USN Commercial and military marine salvors are not the only ones who find this ready-reference indispensible. Owners and operators of both commercial and recreational vessels of almost any size and purpose will find this “practical compendium of marine casualty response know-how” very handy - if not invaluable - before, during and after a ship casualty. Naval architects, marine engineers and other maritime professions rely on it as a handy diagnostic, repair, design and engineering reference; while at the office, and on the water.
JMS now makes the same expert guidance available for your iPhone. Table of Contents 1) INITIAL ACTIONS FOLLOWING A CASUALTY 2) NAVAL ARCHITECTURE 3) RIGGING 4) REFLOATING STRANDINGS 5) SINKINGS 6) TOWING 7) USEFUL INFORMATION INDEX 275 Pages. Coming soon JMS has published numerous naval architecture and marine engineering studies, documents and manuals for both commercial and government clients.
Subject matter spans the spectrum from damage control and salvage reports to comprehensive training and technical manuals. JMS is developing more iPhone applications of the other salvage books they have authored for the U.S.
Navy Supervisor of Salvage. About JMS JMS Naval Architects & Salvage Engineers is a specialty maritime engineering firm with expertise in naval architecture, marine engineering, shipboard operations, salvage engineering and marine science. JMS has a broad client base representing all aspects of the marine industry including tug and barge operators, shipyards, marine science institutes, military vessels, passenger vessel operators, historic ship museums and even pleasure craft owners of power and sailing yachts. Find out why we like to call ourselves The Sea-going Naval Architects.
Www.JMSnet.com.