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Chris Hibbande

Surmount All Your Weekend Problems With Help Of Weekend Payday Loans - 0 views

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    Weekend payday loans are up-to-date economic capability endowed to borrowers in order to get together their operating cost at the weekend. By taking the assist of these finances you can simply handle all your appropriate wants right on time.
mjrmajor

The Ultimate Guide on How to Teach Your Kid Programming | Go Mechanical Keyboard - 0 views

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    As a parent, you want to give your child the best chance to succeed in life. The economy has never been so quickly changing as it is today from the rapid advancement of technology. IT jobs were projected to grow 22% from 2012 to 2020, and all of these jobs benefit or directly from learning to code...
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    As a parent, you want to give your child the best chance to succeed in life. The economy has never been so quickly changing as it is today from the rapid advancement of technology. IT jobs were projected to grow 22% from 2012 to 2020, and all of these jobs benefit or directly from learning to code...
Willox Gorman

The Easy Option To Doggedness All Matters Of Monetary Crunch! - 0 views

Instant Cash Loans Bad Credit is the easy option to doggedness all financial matters pertaining to monetary crunch. These loans can be availed by any people belonging to any working class borrowers...

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started by Willox Gorman on 24 Jun 16 no follow-up yet
medium1 medium1

geschrieben. montblanc meisterstück - 0 views

"Dumbledore - . Kann man nicht ich habe den ganzen Tag beobachten sie Sie könnten zwei Menschen, die weniger wie uns sind nicht zu finden Und sie haben diesen Sohn bekam - . . Sah ich ihn treten se...

montblanc meisterstück

started by medium1 medium1 on 26 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
escaping1 escaping1

nickte. longchamp shopper Le Pliage - 0 views

"Es gibt keine Plattform neun und drei Viertel . ""Es ist auf meinem Ticket . "" Barking ", sagte Onkel Vernon ", heult wütend, die Menge von ihnen. Du wirst sehen. Warte nur . Gut, wir leiten Sie ...

longchamp shopper Le Pliage

started by escaping1 escaping1 on 28 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
medium1 medium1

hängen .Mont blanc starwalker - 0 views

Brilliant Geist. Er war in Ordnung , während eroutta Bücher studyin ", aber dann nahm er ein Jahr Auszeit ter bekommen einige Erfahrung aus erster Hand .... Sie sagen, er traf Vampire in den Schwar...

Mont blanc starwalker

started by medium1 medium1 on 28 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
medium1 medium1

hängen .Mont blanc starwalker - 0 views

Brilliant Geist. Er war in Ordnung , während eroutta Bücher studyin ", aber dann nahm er ein Jahr Auszeit ter bekommen einige Erfahrung aus erster Hand .... Sie sagen, er traf Vampire in den Schwar...

Mont blanc starwalker

started by medium1 medium1 on 28 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
subsequent1 subsequent1

haben. longchamp le pliage - 0 views

Es gibt für mich keinen der üblichen Gründe, die Frauen zum Heiraten veranlassen. Es sei denn, ich würde mich wirklich verlieben, dann wäre es etwas anderes; aber ich war es noch nie, entweder lieg...

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started by subsequent1 subsequent1 on 03 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
medium1 medium1

entlang . montblanc kugelschreiber boheme - 0 views

Aber ihr Mann war rau auf mich - oft er grob auf mich war - und vor allem war er der Friedensrichter , die mich für einen Landstreicher jugged und das ist nicht alles, es ist nicht ein Millionstel ...

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started by medium1 medium1 on 21 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
escaping1 escaping1

aste occhiali oakley frogskins Se oggi - 0 views

A queste parole bisbigliate sommessamente, il burattino, spaventato più che mai, saltò giù dalla groppa della cavalcatura e andò a prendere il suo ciuchino per il muso.Questo paese non somigliava a...

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started by escaping1 escaping1 on 11 Jun 14 no follow-up yet
trimantra

How to run .NET 2/3.5 website/webapplication into .NET 4 hosting environment | Trimantr... - 0 views

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    It is general requirement that you want to host your ASP.NET 2.0/3.5 website/webapplication onto the hosting server which provide support for .NET Framework 4 but not for .NET Framework 2. At the time of development we normally assume that by default all application should run on .NET Framework 4 because backward compatibility is supported. But sometimes they are not because of new changes into ASP.NET 4.0. Here is the link for your reference: ASP.NET 4 Breaking Changes.
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    It is general requirement that you want to host your ASP.NET 2.0/3.5 website/webapplication onto the hosting server which provide support for .NET Framework 4 but not for .NET Framework 2. At the time of development we normally assume that by default all application should run on .NET Framework 4 because backward compatibility is supported. But sometimes they are not because of new changes into ASP.NET 4.0. Here is the link for your reference: ASP.NET 4 Breaking Changes.
liza cainz

Computer Help for Windows Backup in Windows Vista - 2 views

Help Gurus Microsoft tech support experts helped me create windows backup for my Vista computer. I asked them to create backups because I am afraid that something bad might happen to my computer an...

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started by liza cainz on 06 Dec 10 no follow-up yet
Joel Bennett

Introducing BDD -- DanNorth.net - 0 views

  • I decided it must be possible to present TDD in a way that gets straight to the good stuff and avoids all the pitfalls. My response is behaviour-driven development (BDD).
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    It must be possible to present TDD in a way that gets straight to the good stuff and avoids all the pitfalls... my response is behaviour-driven development (BDD).
Kingdon Barrett

Radiant CMS: Why Radiant? - 0 views

    • Kingdon Barrett
       
      I was hoping to provide a list of my blog posts from RSS feeds, as well as links to all of the articles that I have commented on with my friends' blogs. I could list all of my friends' blogs and scrape them periodically, but I was hoping for a solution that uses trackbacks, or whatever pingback-style facilities are available on my friends' blogs. Granted this type of support will vary from site to site, but it should be possible to build a complete publishing record automatically, with the standards we have available today. I posted a comment on otierney.net (my friend Tristan is up on all the latest web standards) and I noticed that his blogger is collecting URLs along with emails. I filled in the link to my Radiant CMS on nerdland.org but I'm afraid my blogger is not going to do anything to collect these pingbacks, when they are fired. Can anyone point out an example code segment or project that highlights this type of behavior?
David Corking

Emacs, TRAMP, Ubuntu « What You're Doing Is Rather Desperate - 2 views

  • edit your ~/.emacs to include the line: (setq tramp-default-method "ssh")
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    Remote editing with ssh - no need to tunnel X11 over ssh. This reminds me of a question that puzzles me: for those of us that use multiple machines, is there a failsafe way to have a master .emacs file for them all? Where do folks store it? On a web server, ftp, NFS directory, a favourite home directory, or a USB stick? Is there a low effort way to sync it: rsync, unison, a custom shell or Emacs lisp script, or a manual scp?
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    Remote editing with ssh - no need to tunnel X11 over ssh, or cope without your window manager. This reminds me of a question that puzzles me: for those of us that use multiple machines, is there a failsafe way to have a master .emacs file for them all? Where do folks store it? On a web server, ftp, NFS directory, a favourite home directory, or a USB stick? Is there a low effort way to sync it: rsync, unison, a custom shell or Emacs lisp script, or a manual scp?
Matteo Spreafico

Joe Duffy's Weblog - OnBeingStateful - 0 views

  • The biggest question left unanswered in my mind is the role state will play in software of the future.
  • The biggest question left unanswered in my mind is the role state will play in software of the future. That seems like an absurd statement, or a naïve one at the very least.  State is everywhere: The values held in memory. Data locally on disk. Data in-flight that is being sent over a network. Data stored in the cloud, including on a database, remote filesystem, etc. Certainly all of these kinds of state will continue to exist far into the future.  Data is king, and is one major factor that will drive the shift to parallel computing.  The question then is how will concurrent programs interact with this state, read and mutate it, and what isolation and synchronization mechanisms are necessary to do so?
  • Many programs have ample gratuitous dependencies, simply because of the habits we’ve grown accustomed to over 30 odd years of imperative programming.  Our education, mental models, books, best-of-breed algorithms, libraries, and languages all push us in this direction.  We like to scribble intermediary state into shared variables because it’s simple to do so and because it maps to our von Neumann model of how the computer works.
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  • We need to get rid of these gratuitous dependencies.  Merely papering over them with a transaction—making them “safe”—doesn’t do anything to improve the natural parallelism that a program contains.  It just ensures it doesn’t crash.  Sure, that’s plenty important, but providing programming models and patterns to eliminate the gratuitous dependencies also achieves the goal of not crashing but with the added benefit of actually improving scalability too.  Transactions have worked so well in enabling automatic parallelism in databases because the basic model itself (without transactions) already implies natural isolation among queries.  Transactions break down and scalability suffers for programs that aren’t architected in this way.  We should learn from the experience of the database community in this regard
  • There will always be hidden mutation of shared state inside lower level system components.  These are often called “benevolent side-effects,” thanks to Hoare, and apply to things like lazy initialization and memorization caches.  These will be done by concurrency ninjas who understand locks.  And their effects will be isolated by convention.
  • Even with all of this support, we’d be left with an ecosystem of libraries like the .NET Framework itself which have been built atop a fundamentally mutable and imperative system.  The path forward here is less clear to me, although having the ability to retain a mutable model within pockets of guaranteed isolation certainly makes me think the libraries are salvageable.  Thankfully, the shift will likely be very gradual, and the pieces that pose substantial problems can be rewritten in place incrementally over time.  But we need the fundamental language and type system support first.
Joel Bennett

Windows 7 Taskbar .NET Sample Library - an Overview - Windows 7 for Developers - The Wi... - 0 views

  • The MainDemo sample is a simple WinForm application that showcases all the functions that are expose via the API, including building a jump list with custom categories and custom tasks, setting an overlay icon and progress bar, and creating and handling events from Thumbnail Toolbar buttons:
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    A series of samples including demonstrations of all the functions that are new in Windows 7 and exposed via the API, including: * building a jump list with custom categories and custom tasks, * setting an overlay icon and progress bar * creating and handling events from Thumbnail Toolbar buttons * customizing taskbar thumbnails
David Corking

Remember Smalltalk? | Gartner Blogs 2008 - 1 views

  • 2) If you are BIG fan of dynamics languages (closures, meta programming, and all that cool stuff) then consider giving Smalltalk a look.  You might like what you see.  Its like Ruby but with bigger muscles.  You think Rails is cool? Check out seaside. In the end we’ll see a up tick in Smalltalk momentum over the next few years. 
  • Please don’t talk about Smalltalk. I enjoy my competitive advantage over the Java/NET crowd
  • Where Smalltalk really shines recently is in field of web applications due to its dynamic nature (live upgrading, debugging etc.) and because its shortcoming are not relevant here.
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • On the Desktop - Dolphin creates 500k exe’s with ease - its a 1 button click (you just have to follow some of their easy put things in packages rules).
  • Remember LAN MAN? OS2? Both were heavily endorsed by Gartner.
  • I laugh when people say poor performance on older hardware was a mjor Smalltalk weakness. We routinely delivered applications that ran on 386 and 68020 processors with 8MB RAM. And yes, they were quite snappy. No, the reason Smalltalk didn’t catch on is because Sun spent more money on Java marketing than was spent on all computer languages combined, since the dawn of time.
  • I’ve listened personally to whiny ROR programmers groan and whine about PHP devs LEARNING ROR and undercutting them.
  • I didn’t fall for it for the marketing. I fell for WORA, for the language/runtime separation, for the multi-vendor approach (Sun never wanted to be the single provider for any Java centric product niche, and in fact was never the leader), for the comprehensive set of vendor-neutral APIs for all sorts of execution environments/applications,
  • For now I would like to see more use of Smalltalk like constructs in Java (Groovy).
  • Smalltalk must have sofisticated CASE tools, business process simulation tools, large development environments etc. etc. etc.
  • I stayed to teach Smalltalk since 1993 and am very happy about this information. Each academic year, we produce a small group of new Smalltalkers in the Czech Republic.
  • Joe Barnhart // Apr 4, 2009 at 2:48 pm At the company where I work, we have used Smalltalk for 19 years. Our tiny team of programmers has beat the pants off of competitors who employ teams 100 times our size.
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    trend spotting
anonymous

All-In-One Code Framework - 7 views

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    Microsoft All-In-One Code Framework delineates the framework and skeleton of Microsoft development techniques through typical sample codes in three popular programming languages (Visual C#, VB.NET, Visual C++). Each sample is elaborately selected, composed, and documented to demonstrate one frequently-asked, tested or used coding scenario based on our support experience in MSDN newsgroups and forums.
Joel Bennett

WIF Workshops - Vibro.NET - 2 views

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    All Will Be Revealed: ~7 Hours Recordings from the WIF Workshops
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