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Rick Fan

Creating OpenSearch plugins for Firefox - MDC - 0 views

  • Your server should serve OpenSearch plugins using the MIME type application/opensearchdescription+xml. Be sure that your Search Plugin XML is well formed. You can check by loading the file directly into Firefox. Ampersands in the template URL need to be escaped with & and tags need to be closed with a trailing slash or matching end tag. The xmlns attribute is important, without it you could get an error message indicating that "Firefox could not download the search plugin from: (URL)". Note that you must include a text/html URL — search plugins including only Atom or RSS URL types (which is valid, but Firefox doesn't support) will also generate the "could not download the search plugin" error. Remotely fetched favicons must not be larger than 10KB
Joel Bennett

microPledge: Get software made - 0 views

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    Micro pledge ... a system for putting pledges or bounties on code features that you'd like to see in your favorite software. Free for open source projects -- proprietary or closed-source projects have some fees associated with them (on the developer side).
Joel Bennett

Download LINQPad - 0 views

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    Start using LINQ for your ad-hoc SQL queries now, and get a head start on .Net 3.5
Joel Bennett

Windows PowerShell : How Out-Default works - 0 views

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    This might just be enough information to get started writing a replacement out-host, one that would be able to color-code things ...
Joel Bennett

Ariel.Atlantica.US - 0 views

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    some random free site where you can get a shell account with just the tiniest bit of access...
Joel Bennett

media for the inner you | matchmine.com - 0 views

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    An api for preferences and social sharing of them to get valid recommendations for music, videos, blogs, etc
Joel Bennett

David J. Smith's Program : Authenticode and Strong naming ("signing") - 0 views

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    This is great information on codesigning, with links to more information, FINALLY, someone who gets how this is supposed to work.
Joel Bennett

Code Signing: two worlds defined - 0 views

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    A quick write up on how to do code signing so that you get BOTH strong naming for GAC installation, AND Code-Signing for author "trust" validation ... Notice that you have to do Code-Signing in a separate post-build step.
Joel Bennett

Tester Center Home - MSDN - 0 views

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    Microsoft has opened the "Tester Center" to the public with the goal of providing a central location for software testers to share stories, knowledge and experience, and get answers, tools, and other resources...
Justin Newton

25 Excellent And Useful Adobe AIR Tutorials & Resources - Opensource, Free and Useful O... - 0 views

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    A bunch of cool Adobe Air guides so you can get AJAX deployed on your desktop
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    Adobe AIR is a cross-platform runtime environment for building rich Internet applications using Adobe Flash, Adobe Flex, HTML, or Ajax, that can be deployed as a desktop application.
Joel Bennett

The Regulator - Get Serious About Regular Expressions - 0 views

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    Roy Osherove's The Regulator is a free Regular Expresssions testing and learning tool...
Joel Bennett

ankhsvn.tigris.org - 0 views

  • AnkhSVN is a Visual Studio .NET addin for the Subversion version control system. It allows you to perform the most common version control operations directly from inside the VS.NET IDE. Not all the functionality provided by SVN is (yet) supported, but the majority of operations that support the daily workflow are implemented.
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    AnkhSVN supports enough of SVN in Visual Studio to get you the source control overlays in your solution explorer, which is all I *really* need. You might want to consider running it along *with* TortoiseSVN
Joel Bennett

html2wiki.pm - Convert HTML text to wiki markup - live preview - 0 views

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    A Perl Module to convert HTML to any of the many pseudo-markups in use by wiki's and blogs, including Textile (see "Confluence") and Markdown, MediaWiki, UseMod, SnipSnap, MoinMoin, etc.
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    At first I thought this could be the "back" part of TIM, but after trying it out on even simple example text, I'm a bit dissapointed. The nested lists, images, and URLs seem broken (although the links at least, work in Confluence).

    The worst problems are that it has no sense of %{style} span% or footnotes, and no concept AT ALL of tables.  It would be nice to at least get the {style} -- and therefore the spans -- working.
Joel Bennett

FastStone Screen Capture - The Best Free Screen Capture Software - 0 views

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    Great little app for taking screenshots -- it can even capture a whole scrolling window -- and outputting them in various formats (jpg,png, pdf) etc.  Some good ideas for ShotGlass if I ever get back to that.
Joel Bennett

Jesse Ezell Blog : HTML Tidy - 0 views

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    A short list of some ways to get from messy html to clean xml
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

Starksoft .NET/Mono Proxy Client | Get Starksoft .NET/Mono Proxy Client at SourceForge.net - 0 views

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    NET/Mono 2.0 Component for creating client side proxy connections to SOCKS v4, SOCKS v4a, SOCKS v5, and HTTP proxy servers. Returns a System TcpClient object once the proxy connection is established. Async calls supported. Examples in C# and VB.NET.
David Corking

Jonathan Schwartz's Blog: Sun's Network Innovations (3 of 4) - 0 views

  • this datacenter systems market is more than $150b annually. And in this datacenter market we build exceptional systems
  • storage, from our new flash based platforms to eco-efficient tape and archive solutions.
  • more than just naked components, they're engineered with remote management and monitoring, component redundancy, integrated virtualization, and on board storage and networking. That's why our margins are higher than the industry's
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  • we now build our entire line of storage systems from general purpose server parts, including Solaris and ZFS, our open source file system.
    • David Corking
       
      So, can anyone build a Sun storage device, or are Sun's "general purpose server parts" better (with better management and redundancy ...) ?
  • using a general purpose OS allows us to easily embrace specialized components (from flash memory to GPU's)
  • why am I paying you a million dollars?" I responded, "You can absolutely run it for free. You just can't call me on Christmas day, you'll be on your own." He gave me the PO.
    • David Corking
       
      Schwartz gives the strong impression of an IT company _without_ its hand in your pocket. It is a similar attitude and reputation, though with proprietary software, rather than services (for free software), that seems to have made Microsoft so wealthy in the late eighties and nineties.
  • Solaris OEM agreements with IBM, Dell, Intel, Fujitsu and HP are so important to our end customers - they know they'll never be locked in.
  • These open source platforms generate, alongside the services attached to them, over a billion dollars a year, making Sun by far and away the world's largest open source software company.
    • David Corking
       
      Hundreds of millions of dollars a year from open source Java alone!
  • Fighting free and open software, like fighting free news or free search, is like fighting gravity - and btw, gravity gets a lot stronger during economic downturns.
    • David Corking
       
      !
  • There is a robust, well-designed open source PBX Server called SipX that is primarily backed by Nortel (due to their acquisition of the creators, Pingtel).
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    Making money - billions of dollars of it - with open specification hardware and open source software
David Corking

Capture it in a unit test | Plum Street - 0 views

  • Get rid of the comment. Make a unit test that demonstrates the setup and expected results in such a clear manner that it’s obvious what the requirement was.
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    Short and sweet.
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