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  2. Comparison of CalDAV and CardDAV implementations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_CalDAV_and...

    (Availability Check) RFC 5546 iCal iTIP(Group Scheduling) RFC 5689 Web­DAV ext. MKCOL RFC 5995 Web­DAV POST add member RFC 6352 Card­DAV vCard RFC 6578 Web­DAV sync RFC 6638 Cal­DAV sched.(Auto-Schedule) RFC 7529 iCal RSCALE RFC 7540 HTTP/2 RFC 7809 Cal­DAV time zones by ref. RFC 7953 iCal VAVAIL­ABILITY Free-busy URL; Baïkal [22] [23 ...

  3. WebDAV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebDAV

    WebDAV (Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning) is a set of extensions to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which allows user agents to collaboratively author contents directly in an HTTP web server by providing facilities for concurrency control and namespace operations, thus allowing Web to be viewed as a writeable, collaborative medium and not just a read-only medium. [1]

  4. Comparison of Subversion clients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Subversion...

    It is common to expose Subversion via WebDAV using the Apache web server. In this case, any WebDAV client can be used, but the functionality provided this way may be limited. Alternative ways to serve Subversion include uberSVN and VisualSVN Server.

  5. Cyberduck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberduck

    Cyberduck is an open-source client for FTP and SFTP, WebDAV, and cloud storage (OpenStack Swift, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2 and Microsoft Azure), available for macOS and Windows (as of version 4.0) licensed under the GPL. Cyberduck is written in Java and C# using the Cocoa user interface framework on macOS and Windows Forms on Windows.

  6. CardDAV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CardDAV

    vCard Extensions to WebDAV (CardDAV) is an address book client/server protocol designed to allow users to access and share contact data on a server. The CardDAV protocol was developed by the IETF and was published as RFC 6352 in August 2011. [1] CardDAV is based on WebDAV, which is based on HTTP, and it uses vCard for contact data. [2]

  7. Transmit (file transfer tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmit_(file_transfer_tool)

    Many of the features of Transmit 4 take advantage of technologies Apple introduced in OS X 10.4, such as uploading using a Dashboard widget or the dock, support for .Mac and iDisk/WebDAV, FTP/WebDAV/S3 servers as disks in Finder (since v4.0), Spotlight, Droplets, Amazon S3 support and Automator plugins.

  8. Coda (web development software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coda_(web_development...

    Coda 1.6 and later supports plug-ins, which are scripts usually written in command line programming languages like Cocoa, AppleScript, Perl, or even shell scripting languages like bash, that appear in Coda's menu bar and do specific tasks like appending URLs or inserting text at a certain point.

  9. MAC address - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC_address

    The Individual Address Block (IAB) is an inactive registry which has been replaced by the MA-S (MAC address block, small), previously named OUI-36, and has no overlaps in addresses with the IAB [6] registry product as of January 1, 2014. The IAB uses an OUI from the MA-L (MAC address block, large) registry, previously called the OUI registry.