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htmlslicemate.com

Get Started With CSS3 Transitions Today - 0 views

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    Transitions (basic animations) are one of the most popular additions in CSS3, and one of the easiest to implement for big gains on your site. A transition is simply an animation from one set of CSS properties to another. So for example; whilst before you may have had links with blue text, which suddenly turned orange when you hovered on them, you would now replace that sudden jump with a more graceful animation.
htmlslicemate.com

30 Cool MadL Toy Designs for Inspiration - 0 views

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    MadL toys are one type of vinyl toys where its design can be customized according to the taste of its designer. It has a square shaped head and a semicircular ears on both sides. It can be bought in different sizes depending on how big or small you want it. For this post, we will be featuring 30 Cool MadL Toy Designs for Inspiration. This includes some of the coolest designs made by different talented artists. With the of skill, talent, and playful imagination, they were able to create their own awesome designs they could be proud of. So come, take a peek, and enjoy.
htmlslicemate.com

Why Freelancers Need a Good Working Environment at Home - 0 views

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    When you work on your freelance jobs each day, you would go to your work station and see the usual place which you consider your own spot. But is your working environment healthy and positive? Does it affect your work performance? Well, we only hear of working environment if we speak of office work where co-workers exist and the bosses are there. You could picture a scene where everyone are in business suit and are working on their own cubicles or tables. In a big office, work environment would include good relationship with co-workers and a happy environment no matter how busy each one is. It also includes respect to each member of the company.
htmlslicemate.com

From Zero to Hello World in Scala - 0 views

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    Scala is one of the most attractive programming languages out right now. There is a lot of hype around it and programmers world-wide are publicly recognizing it as the possible next big thing in programming. Here's why. Scala is all about functional programming in an object oriented context. It tries to take the best of both worlds and combine them into a highly efficient, intelligent, and relatively easy to understand language. Right now it is the leader in today's renaissance of functional programming languages.
htmlslicemate.com

Clown Car Technique: Solving Adaptive Images In Responsive Web Design - 0 views

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    Adaptive images are the current hot topic in conversations about adaptive and responsive Web design. Why? Because no one likes any of the solutions thus far. New elements and attributes are being discussed as a solution for what is, for most of us, a big headache: to provide every user with one image optimized for their display size and resolution, without wasting time, memory or bandwidth with a client-side solution..............
htmlslicemate.com

Delivering responsive images with Drupal - 0 views

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    For most web developers, delivering the images to the low-bandwidth mobile devices could not be less than any brain teaser, where they feel like they have been stuck in a complex task, just like searching a needle in the dry haystack! Well, it could screw-up the brain! Even the developers, who are well-acquainted with responsive web design techniques, know that by setting the max-width of the images up to 100%, can't resolve this issue as the server will still render big size image to the user's phone. The mobile optimized web applications are designed to run smoothly for the low bandwidth connection with formatting according to the screen of the device.
htmlslicemate.com

Top Usability Mistakes in Web Design - 0 views

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    High-quality usability has been the center of discussions in the industry in the past ten years, as it becomes more and more important for users. Good usability can also help build brand awareness and can generally improve a user's opinion of a website and even a company. There is so much focus on usability today because big and small companies showed how important a good usability strategy can turn out to be. Good usability has been in the past couple of years at the heart of successful start-ups. Simple ideas are most of the time the most innovative and this is mainly what usability is about: making a feature or a product easy to use, while still keeping the product quality at a high level. Today's article comes a lot down to common sense. It seems that after years and years of discussing this issue, web designers still have a hard time understanding it. Usability is not a joke anymore and the advices below should be printed out and pinned on the wall in front of your desk.
Andrey Karpov

I beg recommend to your colleagues the our big 64-bit C/C++ guide. - 0 views

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    The course is devoted to creation of 64-bit applications in C/C++ language and is intended for the Windows developers who use Visual Studio 2005/2008/2010/2012 environment. Developers working with other 64-bit operating systems will learn much interesting as well. The course will consider all the steps of creating a new safe 64-bit application or migrating the existing 32-bit code to a 64-bit system.
Fabien Cadet

Service Oriented Agony | 8th Light, 2012-02-01 by Bob Martin - 7 views

  • The structure seems obvious to system designers who have grown tired of single monolithic systems and want to break those systems up into components and services. What could be more natural than to break the system along the lines of data base managment?
  • Unfortunately this is a huge violation of the Single Responsibility Principle — or its big brother the Common Closure Principle.
  • These principles tell us to group together things that change together, and keep apart things that change for different reasons.
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  • When you separate things that change for the same reasons, you have to make changes in many different places in the system.
  • So it’s a lot of work just to get anything working.
  • Moreover, when you group together things that change for different reasons, you expose the components of the system to collateral damage, thrashing, CM collisions, and a whole host of other problems.
  • So what’s the solution? First of all, I question whether the system needed to be partitioned into services.
  • Services are expensive and complicated, you should only create them if you absolutely need to. It’s always easier to live in a single process. Remember Martin Fowler’s first law of distributed objects: Don’t distribute your objects.
  • Many systems could be streamlined, and development made much faster, if the system designers paid more attention to the Single Responsibility Principle.
escaping1 escaping1

29.88 € longchamp La - 0 views

Si ce n'est qu'on lui a reproché, au temps du dictateur, d'engloutir une grosse partie du budget destiné à l'Education nationale. Aujourd'hui, tel n'est plus le cas. Une majorité d'élèves paient le...

Bas de prix longchamp 29.88 2014 tolie sac noir

started by escaping1 escaping1 on 21 Jul 14 no follow-up yet
anonymous

Dubai Escorts - 0 views

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    Hey I'm Rekha from Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharjah (UAE) Escorts. I'm work at Dubai Escorts.
anonymous

Russian Escorts - 0 views

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    Hey I'm Elvira from Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharjah (UAE) Escorts. I'm work at Russian Escorts.
Joel Bennett

CLR Inside Out: New Library Classes in "Orcas" -- MSDN Magazine, April 2007 - 0 views

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    New CLR libraries incladd-in hosting model, which was discussed in the last two editions of CLR Inside OutSupport for the Suite B set of cryptographic algorithms, as specified by the National Security Agency (NSA)Support for big integersA high-performance set collectionSupport for anonymous and named pipesImproved time zone supportLightweight reader/writer lock classesBetter integration with Event Tracing for Windows® (ETW), including ETW provider and ETW trace listener APIs
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.
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  • 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
Hanjian Jan

The Big Computer Security - 0 views

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    Security Computer for Programmer
Fabien Cadet

Programming as if Performance Mattered, by James Hague [2004-04-04] - 3 views

  • I frequently see bare queries from programmers in discussion forums, especially from new programmers, who are worried about performance. These worries often stem from popular notions about what operations are "slow." Division. Square roots. Mispredicted branches. Cache unfriendly data structures.
  • Inevitably someone chimes in that making out-of-context assumptions, especially without profiling, is a bad idea. And they're right.
  • The golden rule of programming has always been that clarity and correctness matter much more than the utmost speed. Very few people will argue with that. And yet do we really believe it? If we did, then 99% of all programs would be written in something like Python. Or Erlang.
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  • At the same time, such concerns and advice seem to remain constant despite rapid advances in hardware.
  • That tempting, enticing, puzzle-solving activity called "optimization," it hasn't gone away either.
  • Only now the process is on a different level. It isn't machine level twiddling and cycle counting, but it isn't simply mathematical analysis of algorithms either.
  • The big difference is that the code changes I made are substantially safer than running a program and having it silently hang the system. All array accesses are bounds-checked. There's no way to accidentally overwrite a data structure. There's no way to create a memory leak.
  • Really, this is what those cycle-counting programmers from 1985 dreamed of.
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    « I frequently see bare queries from programmers in discussion forums, especially from new programmers, who are worried about performance. These worries often stem from popular notions about what operations are "slow." Division. Square roots. Mispredicted branches. Cache unfriendly data structures. »
liza cainz

Computer Help and Support for the Aged - 1 views

I am a senior citizen and having HelpGurus to help and support me in my computer troubles is really a big help. With their remote computer help, I do not need to call local computer technicians to ...

support service Desktop computer technical services PC tech

started by liza cainz on 08 Apr 11 no follow-up yet
pctech spportnow

PC Tech Support Now Really Helps - 2 views

I am a father of two and my wife is working abroad. There came a time when my computer experienced a breakdown which really cut off my daily chatting session with my wife through Skype. I reported ...

virus protection tech support PC technical

started by pctech spportnow on 12 Jul 11 no follow-up yet
James Stewart

Fast and Accurate Computer Help to the Rescue - 1 views

I was about to start my presentation when my computer to hung up on me. It was really a big inconvenience for me, not to mention very embarrassing. Good thing I was able to renew my subscription to...

computer technical help

started by James Stewart on 13 Oct 11 no follow-up yet
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