The PDF Edition of Ubuntu Pocket Guide and Reference is available entirely free of charge. It is practically identical to the Print Edition. You can download it by clicking the links below. Over 250,000 people already have!
This documentation contains information about the version of WiX distributed with Visual Studio Team System code name "Rosario" November CTP. It contains information about:
* What WiX is
* Using WiX on the command line
* Using WiX in Visual Studio
* WiX Schema Reference
* Advanced WiX Usage such as patch building, custom actions, and extensions
* Additional help links and resources
XtUnit.Framework is an extensibility framework for nUnit and MbUnit to allow you to create new test-case types and attributes.
It includes the well known [Rollback] attribute (built in on MbUnit, but not nUnit) which allows automatic rollback of changes to your database which occur during the execution of a test.
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XPathmania is a visual studio extension to allow executing XPath queries on XML documents ... now you can test your XPath queries without loading up an external app
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Gives you the ability to create hyperlinks within your code comments... that is, links to comments from comments ... it's almost like wiki comments (ah, we can only dream).
xVal is a validation framework for ASP.NET MVC applications. It makes it easy to link up your choice of server-side validation mechanism with your choice of client-side validation library, neatly fitting both into ASP.NET MVC architecture and conventions.
Interesting clippings from the slides:
"What can we do with it?
* Write applications. Melodie uses lots of Smalltalk, first
pure-Smalltalk app committed to svn in January.
* Write scripts. Corner activation and gesture app uses
Smalltalk for scripting.
* Modify existing apps...
"
"We can inspect classes in a code browser, see method
names, and write replacements in any running application.
In a perfect Free Software system, any user can make any
changes. "
My comment above might imply that Smalltalk is not modern. The truth is far from it, as Smalltalk is still pushing the boundaries of technology and user interfaces, from Croquet and Qwaq, to Alice, Sophie, Scratch and Etoys.
(I fixed Friday's broken link to the PDF.) From what I read so far, this seems to be another attempt at a fully introspecitve integrated and customisable personal computer with a graphical desktop. In other words, it is Dynabook Smalltalk and Lisp workstations all over again, but quite likely with some interesting modern twists.
1. Form Labels Work Best Above The Field
2. Users Focus On Faces
3. Quality Of Design Is An Indicator Of Credibility
4. Most Users Do Not Scroll
5. Blue Is The Best Color For Links
6. The Ideal Search Box Is 27-Characters Wide
7. White Space Improves Comprehension
8. Effective User Testing Doesn't Have To Be Extensive
9. Informative Product Pages Help You Stand Out
10. Most Users Are Blind To Advertising
Telerik's community software page includes links to their free software, and "community" versions of some of their commercial products (like Sitefinity).