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sahargull

onlinetech: San Diego Bus Tour Make Travel Easy - 0 views

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    Visit to San Diego you will see the different beautiful places of San Diego there are so many places for visiting they are the Sea World, San Diego Zoo,
adenise1728

MetroFramework Modern UI MetroForm Properties - DenRic Denise - 0 views

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    MetroFramework Modern UI MetroForm Properties is a simple documentation to explain the different custom properties the you can change and use in MetroFramew
sahargull

There are some best rental cars Companies in California | pacificrentacar - 0 views

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    The Golden state attracted most of tourists, business man whom they can start their business and the tourist can tour to different places in California.  Many of company offer the transport service...
David Rietz

Graph Database Tutorial - 0 views

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    Graph databases are still quite unfamiliar to many developers. This is the first post in a series discussing the operations a graph database makes available to the developer. Just like there are only so many different things you can do on a relational database (like CREATE TABLE or INSERT), there are only so many things you can do on a graph database. It is worth looking at them one at a time, and that's the goal of this series.
Saqib Imran

The iPhone 4 Antenna Song - 0 views

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    "Jonathan Mann is a simple song writer and composer who does this for a living. In the light of the recent events which has caught Apple's leg in terms of Antenna problem and the whole "Hold it differently" mantra, this guy has composed a song which is good enough to smack few laughs and giggles directly on the face of Apple."
Joel Bennett

SheepShaver - Gwenole Beauchesne - 0 views

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    SheepShaver is an Open Source PowerPC MacOS run-time environment. That is, it enables you to run PowerPC Classic MacOS software on your computer, even if you are using a different operating system.
anonymous

Pinax - 1 views

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    Pinax is an open-source collection of integrated, but reusable apps for the Django Web Framework. By integrating numerous reusable Django apps to take care of the things that many sites have in common, it lets you focus on what makes your site different.
anonymous

Traits - 0 views

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    Traits are a simple composition mechanism for structuring object-oriented programs. A Trait is essentially a parameterized set of methods; it serves as a behavioral building block for classes and is the primitive unit of code reuse. With Traits, classes are still organized in a single inheritance hierarchy, but they can make use of Traits to specify the incremental difference in behavior with respect to their superclasses. Unlike mixins and multiple inheritance, Traits do not employ inheritance as the composition operator. Instead, Trait composition is based on a set of composition operators that are complementary to single inheritance and result in better composition properties.
Joel Bennett

Main Page - TagLib# - 0 views

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    An Open Source media-tagging library with support for ID3, ASF, APE, Xiph, and other media tags embedded in everything from .asf to .wv including mp3 and mpeg4, wmv, etc. Supports a large variety of movie and music formats and abstracts away the differences so you can just write: file.Tag.Title, file.Tag.Duration ... etc.
Joel Bennett

The Thing About Git - 0 views

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    Pistos should have added this to the group -- doesn't anyone else share things around here?
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    A good description of how Git is different than other version control systems -- makes me almost interested in using it.
Joel Bennett

Workflows - Bazaar Version Control - 0 views

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    A page to help decide whether Bazaar is the right VCS for you: One of the great things about Bazaar is its adaptability to different ways of working .... Workflows can be changed, mixed and matched as required.
Joel Bennett

SyncToy v2.0 Download - 0 views

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    SyncToy, a free PowerToy for Microsoft Windows, is an easy to use, highly customizable program that helps users to do the heavy lifting involved with the copying, moving, and synchronization of different directories. Most common operations can be performed with just a few clicks of the mouse, and additional customization is available witho
Dhaval Shah

What is a Lifecycle Anyway? - 0 views

  • It occurred to me that the title of this blog is going to mean something different to anyone who reads it. So I will explain what it means to me.A lifecycle describes the progression of something from its very conception until it no longer has any value. A lifecycle breaks down this progression into generalized stages so we can be smart about dealing with whatever it is based on where we think it is in the lifecycle. The most obvious lifecycle is our own from child, to young adult, to middle age, to old age. We make these distinctions in order deal with the realities of say, voting, retirement planning, and advertising. It's one lifecycle, but it is treated differently by government, banking, and marketing stakeholders, respectively.
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    A nice explanation of *lifecycle* term in context of application development.
Joel Bennett

dircproxy - Google Code - 0 views

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    dircproxy is an IRC proxy server ("bouncer") designed for people who use IRC from lots of different workstations or clients, but wish to remain connected and see what they missed while they were away
Joel Bennett

NDepend - 0 views

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    NDepend is a tool that simplifies managing a complex .NET code base. Architects and developers can analyze code structure, specify design rules, plan massive refactoring, do effective code reviews and master evolution by comparing different versions of the code.
Matteo Spreafico

Fabulous Adventures In Coding : The Stack Is An Implementation Detail, Part One - 0 views

  • Almost every article I see that describes the difference between value types and reference types explains in (frequently incorrect) detail about what “the stack” is and how the major difference between value types and reference types is that value types go on the stack.
  • I find this characterization of a value type based on its implementation details rather than its observable characteristics to be both confusing and unfortunate. Surely the most relevant fact about value types is not the implementation detail of how they are allocated, but rather the by-design semantic meaning of “value type”, namely that they are always copied “by value”.
  • Of course, the simplistic statement I described is not even true. As the MSDN documentation correctly notes, value types are allocated on the stack sometimes. For example, the memory for an integer field in a class type is part of the class instance’s memory, which is allocated on the heap.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • As long as the implementation maintains the semantics guaranteed by the specification, it can choose any strategy it likes for generating efficient code
  • That Windows typically does so, and that this one-meg array is an efficient place to store small amounts of short-lived data is great, but it’s not a requirement that an operating system provide such a structure, or that the jitter use it. The jitter could choose to put every local “on the heap” and live with the performance cost of doing so, as long as the value type semantics were maintained
  • I would only be making that choice if profiling data showed that there was a large, real-world-customer-impacting performance problem directly mitigated by using value types. Absent such data, I’d always make the choice of value type vs reference type based on whether the type is semantically representing a value or semantically a reference to something.
David Corking

The dumbing down of technology | Tony Lawrence | 2008 - 0 views

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    I love this article. Lawrence is 60 and can perhaps afford to be sanguine, but I am glad he is warning the rest of us.
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    Some quotable quotes here: "while we laugh at the guy who expected that his computer could be hooked up to his boom box to use the cd, he's actually just a bit ahead of us. Yes, ahead, not behind. In the future, he probably could get his computer to talk the boom box into transferring data from its cd." "When I was a teenager, I had a friend who made extra money testing and changing vacuum tubes in TV's and radios. Try earning money that way today- there is actually a very small market for that kind of thing, and there are still people who sell tubes and the like, but that market is pretty small. In the dumbed down computers of the future, there may still be a few antique machines kicking around here and there, but that isn't going to support very many of us." This is largely true and happening all the time. A programmer can use Python or Smalltalk without needing to know C (or Fortran or assembler.) A child can program in Morphic tiles (Etoys and Scratch)! We don't need to know the difference between a serial cable and a printer cable, or how to install a driver' it is all USB (or Bluetooth!) There are some gurus that program USB, but perhaps only a few hundred of them, and the rest of us just use it.
Joel Bennett

Diff/Merge/Patch Library for C#/.NET - 0 views

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    "I don't know why I did it, but I decided to translate the Perl module Algorithm::Diff into C#, since there aren't any C# libraries yet for finding the differences between two lists."
Joel Bennett

Trang XML Schema converter - 0 views

  • W3C XML Schema is supported for output only, not for input
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    Trang converts between different schema languages for XML. It supports the following languages: * RELAX NG (XML syntax) * RELAX NG compact syntax * XML 1.0 DTDs * W3C XML Schema
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