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Posting links to your own blog is not a good idea.
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_beauw_ wrote: I've never understood why this site has become (and has allowed itself to become) associated so strongly with Microsoft. All I can figure is that a few vocal participants here have pulled the site in that direction. This trend seems to have become even stronger since WPF came out. Code Project embraced that ill-fated technology with open arms, along with all of the dubious promises and bad architectural arguments that accompanied it.
I see you are new here
http://web.archive.org/web/200102011506/http://codeproject.com/[^]
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And that's the whole essence. Write articles for none .NET languages/frameworks - they will help to drive interest in the site forward. One of the reasons I've posted so few really development focussed articles is because so much has been written about .NET already; I tend to try and post on things that I haven't seen elsewhere on the site (or even on t'Interweb), or updates to older techniques that can be done in newer, interesting ways.
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Zoomzum[^]
Quote: A good audio editor is very necessary because it really helps to cut or copy and even paste sections of the audio and this enables to either shorten the audio file and can remove the unwanted part from the particular audio track.
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You have posted three times and each occasion linked to this blog. If it is yours, then link to it via your user profile and CP will do the rest; I suggest you read up on how CP can link back to your blog and publish your articles.
If you do keep posting these items here, I am afraid you'll be laballed a spammer and voted off the site. Democracy sucks like that.
Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done.
Drink. Get drunk. Fall over - P O'H
OK, I will win to day or my name isn't Ethel Crudacre! - DD Ethel Crudacre
I cannot live by bread alone. Bacon and ketchup are needed as well. - Trollslayer
Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb - they're often *students*, for heaven's sake - Terry Pratchett
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How did you know that was going to happen?
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
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Better management of memory and updates highlight the latest release of the Mozilla Foundation's Web browser, Firefox 15. Firefox's development team has steadily improved the browser's memory management over recent months, but with this release of the program, it's targeting a major contributor to the software's piggish memory ways: add-on applications.
More?[^]
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Actually, it only makes a difference if you are using leaky plugins. The worst memory problems have already been fixed several versions before
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It is my favorite browser as it loads the pages very quickly and the add-ons are just awesome which adds stars to its existing features.
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Good organization is all about setting yourself up to succeed. It means getting rid of anything that would interfere with the process of making a recipe or preparing an entire meal. If you are in the middle of preparation, you don’t want to stop and find the proper pot, or dig around in the cupboard for an ingredient: that opens you up to distractions and errors. When I’m getting ready to make a dish, I make sure everything is there. Being organized is the first and most important part of coding.
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(mostly) agree with that.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
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The second most important thing is an endless supply of caffeine.
/ravi
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Ravi Bhavnani wrote: The second most important thing is an endless supply of caffeine BACON
FTFY!
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
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I think I'm going to buy some ham (and salami) today. Oddly, I've been off it for months.
/ravi
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That's sad - but at least you have recovered! Please do not bring the "going off pig products" virus anywhere near me...
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
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As it turns out, I ended up eating pasta + beef tacquitos last night. This could be more serious than I thought.
PS: Not sure why you got 1'd. Countered.
/ravi
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There's a famous lightening talk given by Gary Bernhardt about Javascript and Ruby oddities. I would like to start a series of blog posts documenting some oddities in the Java language for fun! I'll explain why or where these oddities come from with reference to the Java Language Specification when possible. I hope you learn some new things. Java programmers can declare array variables in several ways...
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Although I’ve been using GitHub for open source projects for several years now, this is the first time I’ve worked with it in a largish (20+ developers) team. The default VCS for a Microsoft shop is, of course, TFS, so deciding to use GitHub might be seen as somewhat curious. This post describes why we came to the decision, how we integrate GitHub into our development process, and our experience so far. So why did we choose Git as our VCS? git commit "All in!"
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Genuine question. I’ve written before about Test-Driven Development, and I’m sure some of you practice it: can you show evidence that it’s better than (or, for that matter, evidence that it’s worse than) some other practice? Statistically significant evidence? How about security? Can you be confident that there’s a benefit to spending any money or time on information security countermeasures? On what should it be spent? Which interventions are most successful? Can you prove that? Where is the evidence for Evidence-Based Software Engineering?
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We don't share the evidence - that is one of the major differences between the immature industry we are and the mature industries like aviation.
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Deploying is a big part of the lives of most GitHub employees. We don't have a release manager and there are no set weekly deploys. Developers and designers are responsible for shipping new stuff themselves as soon as it's ready. This means that deploying needs to be as smooth and safe a process as possible. The best system we've found so far to provide this flexibility is to have people deploy branches. Always be shipping!
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It’s time for us to move beyond screen-based thinking. Because when we think in screens, we design based upon a model that is inherently unnatural, inhumane, and has diminishing returns. It requires a great deal of talent, money and time to make these systems somewhat usable, and after all that effort, the software can sadly, only truly improve with a major overhaul. There is a better path: No UI.
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Terrence Dorsey wrote: It requires a great deal of talent, money and time to make these systems somewhat usable, No, all it takes is a view model.
/ravi
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