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I’m David Rodriguez, a happy Spanish guy living and working in Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain) where I born. I am one of the lucky ones who has the opportunity to work with cutting edge technologies at DNN as the Lead Engineer on the Cloud Team. David tells us about his work on DNN (formerly DotNetNuke).
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A while back I wrote a riveting 3-part developer’s guide to copyright law and open source licensing for developers.... I’m pretty sure you read every word at the edge of your seat. Who doesn’t love reading about laws, licenses, and copyright!? Seriously though, I hope some of you found it useful. In this post, I want to talk about some recent developments that should make it easier for developers to license their code. IANAL, but this looks pretty handy.
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In Visual Studio 2013, we have introduced new features that boost productivity and save time when working inside the Editor. Some of these are new features and some are the most popular extensions from Productivity Power Tools.... Our primary focus for the Editor in this version is to keep the developer in context as much as possible. This blog post describes capabilities that bring information to your fingertips and allow you to do as much as possible without leaving your place in code. Hello World never looked so good.
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I wish they would work on the resource editor (and resource management) for MFC code.
I'd rather be phishing!
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I don't see anything new (and useful) that isn't already covered by my VS2010 + add-ons.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Good to know. I'll stick with my Win 7 + VS 2010 setup for a while. Also there's no decent replacement for my laptop with 1920 x 1200 resolution yet, so I'm gonna wait another 1-2 years before jumping on the next greatest thing.
Wout
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So how can we optimize mobile web development? The first answer is pretty simple: don’t try to use JavaScript for tasks (like photo or video editing) that push it past its limits. As far as JavaScript has come, it wasn’t built for that. Native apps are indeed good for more than building browsers. The second answer is trickier: it means recognizing that web applications include much more than JavaScript. Sorry kids, switching to jQuery isn't going to help. Ask your parents why.
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I am currently working on a single page web application written with AngularJS that communicates with a REST API written with Django and Tastypie. Since I run both the client and the server locally on my machine, every HTTP request that my AngularJS application makes receives a response from the REST API in tens of milliseconds. This is not ideal. You could check into a hotel with wifi, or try this little trick.
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RSS is dead has been the motto of several tech publications (none of whom actually deleted their feeds… but that’s another story!). The truth is these people were right in the sense that RSS has seen very little innovation, because one player was incredibly dominant and no-one could really distinguish from it. Now, that player is gone, but if we only use new readers who provide the same experience, we’re probably not going to see this ecosystem explode again. RSS is dead. Long live your RSS subscription.
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No, I'm still subscribed to The Insider News through RSS
Beauty cannot be defined by abscissas and ordinates; neither are circles and ellipses created by their geometrical formulas.
Source
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A new architecture has evolved to let developers conceptualize and build applications that satisfy today’s demands. We call these Reactive Applications. This architecture allows developers to build systems that are event-driven, scalable, resilient and interactive: delivering highly interactive user experiences with a real-time feel, backed by a scalable and resilient application stack, ready to be deployed on multicore and cloud computing architectures. The Reactive Manifesto describes these critical traits which are needed for going reactive. Turn me loose tonight, 'cause I'm... reactive?
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If we limit our discussion to personal computing devices (smartphones, tablets, laptops and desktops), where Intel uses two microarchitectures ARM uses three.... If we look at currently available cores, there’s the Cortex A15 on the high end, Cortex A9 for the mainstream and Cortex A7 for entry/low cost markets. If we’re to draw parallels with Intel’s product lineup, the Cortex A15 is best aligned with ultra low power/low frequency Core parts (think Y-series SKUs), while the Cortex A9 vector parallels Atom. Cortex A7 on the other hand targets a core size/cost/power level that Intel doesn’t presently address. Cortex the (Intel) Killer?
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Google has patched a security vulnerability that could have left Glass users with some major issues. Lookout Security discovered a flaw in Google Glass back in May that would allow a hacker to create a QR Code that -- once scanned by Glass -- could see all of the connections running through the glasses-mounted computer. A hacker could also deliver a payload over the Internet that would wreak havoc on Google Glass and possibly steal information. Look into my codez... You're getting sleepy... Very sleepy...
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A few days ago, Peter Gramantik from our research team found a very interesting backdoor on a compromised site. This backdoor didn’t rely on the normal patterns to hide its content (like base64/gzip encoding), but stored its data in the EXIF headers of a JPEG image. It also used the exif_read_data and preg_replace PHP functions to read the headers and execute itself. An interesting backdoor, but it's exploiting an age-old mistake: passing untrusted input.
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More than 40 percent of software developers globally say that security isn't a top priority for them, and a similar percentage don't use a secure application program process, according to a new study.... On the development side, only about 62 percent "always" take security into account when developing or contracting for software applications. Thirty-one percent "usually" do, and 7 percent "never" do, the survey found. A small number of respondents thought "Secure Development Lifestyle" was illegal in their jurisdiction.
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Seulement, dans certains cas, n'est-ce pas, on n'entend guère que ce qu'on désire entendre et ce qui vous arrange le mieux... [^]
Joe never complained of anything but ever did his duty in his way of life, with a strong hand, a quiet tongue, and a gentle heart [^]
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I've blogged before, in fact in 2004, (!) that Windows is missing the text mode boat. There is a massive opportunity for a great, nay, awesome and pretty, command line on Windows. If someone cracks this problem, they're gonna be heroes.... Here's some command line utilities that augment and help - but don't yet complete save - the Windows Command Line. Do you use the command line [Y/n]?
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A couple of years ago, Linus Torvalds was discussing Linux version numbers and said, "I think I will call 3.11 Linux for Workgroups." It turns out he wasn't joking. With a release candidate of Linux 3.11 now available, Torvalds has actually named the new version of the kernel "Linux for Workgroups." He even gave it a Windows-themed boot icon featuring Linux's mascot penguin, Tux, holding a flag emblazoned with an old Windows logo. Linux NT is just around the corner.
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Seems that Linux is not doing a very good job of staying current. Workgroups, my god, so one dimensional. Would vote up if I could.
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You can vote up, see those arrows to the left of the comment area? Click the green one...
If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.-John Q. Adams You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering.-Wernher von Braun Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.-Albert Einstein
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Never realized. Did not see the voting where it use to be. Have upvoted
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Amazing. The linux distro's before Linux 3.11 for Workgroups are still way more stable and advanced than Windows 8... hmmm. I guess Linux 3.11 will blow Windows out of that water
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this! term is way more advanced than cmd.exe, and who needs multimedia and stuff like filesystem ACL anyway
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A few weeks ago I wrote about the comparison between regex-based lexers in Python and Javascript. Javascript running on Node.js (V8) ended up being much faster than Python, and in both languages a speed improvement could be gained by switching to a single regex and letting the regex engine do the hard work. However, in the real world you’ll find that most lexers (particularly lexers for real programming languages) are not written that way. Go ahead, tell that Regex joke. You know you want to...
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The current state of experimental reproducibility in computer science is lamentable. The result is inevitable: experimental results enter the literature which are just wrong. I don’t mean that the results don’t generalise. I mean that an algorithm which was claimed to do something just does not do that thing. Without the ability to recompute your results, there's little science in Computer Science.
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