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All of "US" support the .NET whilst "WE" can´t see dr.Bill's evil plan to subscribe all programs where we lose our right for free internet.
Everything will be taped, knowledge would be paid.. Not good.. I think. Because we´ve been experiencing through the decade where
there no limits for where information and thus knowledge can´t be seized. We are urging infront of compters to feel "it's" power,
"it's" freedom and to discover imagination and thus our's worst humanity enemie, "selfishness". Well i honestly wouldn't think that
my child will want to go in fathers footsteps by choosing to work against nextcomming generation. And I stil can't get my hands
of Borland complier nor the .NET to satisfy my urge of selfishness. And definitely not "soHopedFor" inner awareness's urge to crack "the" .NET.
Oh my god, I just gave the possesive sign " ' " to somthing that cant even be proven.
I am deeply sorry if I came to wrong place expressing what concernes US, notknowing "IF" the respected codeproject.com/ is sponsored by
some of Bill's crew. I am deeply sorry if I offended someone.
I am very confused.
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mentomorph wrote:
I am very confused.
I see.
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mentomorph wrote:
I am very confused.
You must be. This isn't Slashdot. Conspiracy theories and FUD is pretty much ignored here (The Soapbox is the only place where this is welcomed).
If it happens, you can say I told you so, but until then let's concentrate on developing useful software.
Michael
Death is the price we pay for progress, you know - The Doctor
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It seems that the next generation (including many products released in the last two years) of desktop applicatoins developed by Microsoft seem to look more and more like web applications. Quite a few seem to use IE as the interface host. Take a screenshot of the new CRM suite to be released by year end:
http://www.greatplains.com/documents/images/CRM_integrate_smartly.jpg
This is obviously an instance of IE... the menu, status, and tool bars really hammer it home but I'm also noticing quite a few of the applications also have hover text links and perform most of their actions via a web-like interface. In my opinion, these new interfaces are a welcomed change. Nothing negative of the past ones. I think they are starting to blur the line between what is a desktop application and what is a web application.
I'm curious to how this is being implemented. If they are using IE has their UI host, then how exactly are they making the interface itself? Is it just HTML pages with a lot of web controls? I'm a seasoned web developer and have some experience in desktop apps (getting more and more into WinForm applications). I'd like to start using this type of an interface in my applications rather than the existing UI we've been working with for so many years.
I'd love to see some discussion on this topic from some of the MS developers as well.
Thanks!
-AC, MCDBA
Andrew Connell, MCDBA
IM on MSN
andrew@aconnell.com
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It is done by using the MS HTML engine together with the HTML DOM engine in IE.
The text for the HTML is stored in strings in the application, and they are outputed to the IE control via the DOM calls (document.Write("bla") in javascript)
Events get raised up into the application, so clicks can be processed by the EXE.
This is all still a bit of a hack. I can't wait for when they get it really right, with a form designer built from the ground up with all the features of IE for rendering.
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Has anyone tried signing a .NET executable with an authenticode digital ID? Does it confirm that you signed it and allow you to be added to a list of trusted sources? Any info would be greatly appreciated
Thanks,
Steve
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Are there any books that explain how Visio and VS.NET Enterprise Architect interact? I'm looking for a nice step-by-step guide on how to use both these tools together. Any suggestions?
Michael
Look, try and use your intelligence, man, even if you are a politician. - The Doctor
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Are there any compression classes under .NET Framework. I need to zip-compress some files or something similar.
Thanks!
Best regards,
Alexandru Savescu
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Have a look at I C# Code. There's a .NET Zip lib. for download.
Cheers,
Simon
"Sign up for a chance to be among the first to experience the wrath of the gods.", Microsoft's home page (24/06/2002)
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Thanks for the link Simon. I am suprised there are no compression classes in the .NET framework.
Best regards,
Alexandru Savescu
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I have a file/structure with polygons that could be either filled or a hole. These are added to or substracted from the "master"-polygon.
If the points in a polygon are in clockwise order the polygon is added. If the points are in counter clockwise order the polygon is substracted.
How can I tell if a polygons points are in counter clockwise order?
Can I use GDI+ classes (Region? GraphicsPath?) for this? (The good old way of finding the angle between the first two vectors in the polygon is way too time consuming. I have a lot of polygons to manage!)
-Øyvind
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What software protection strategy are you using under .NET?
Do you know if any company selling protection system?
Best regards,
Paul.
Jesus Christ is LOVE! Please tell somebody.
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I haven't seen many full blown ESD applications with support for .NET. Most of the offerings at present appear to be obfuscators, with the intention of protecting the developers IP by making IL as difficult as possible to reverse engineer.
One vendor I have noticed is Crypkey (http://www.crypkey.com) has announced support for the .NET platform with its products. I'm not too sure about how secure their software is -- astalavista.box.sk might be a good resource to check out (beware though, popups are of a slightly dodgy nature).
I guess it depends upon what you need in a package. If its just to prevent others from understanding your algorithms etc., then an obfuscator may be all you need. If you need to limit people to trial periods etc., then you'll need something more advanced (but probably also an obfuscator to stop others from determining how to patch your protection). If you need a complete ESD solution then it gets even more complicated.
I think the key way ahead will be the opportunities available with web services, the ability to place parts of logic onto a separate server (under your control) which could quite happily protect logic from prying eyes, and/or patching. However, this would have to be done in a certain way to prevent users becoming annoyed with slow start-up times etc.
Incidentally, this was something I was considering looking into and writing a (speculative) article about possible protection schemes using .NET web services.
As another side note, since there are few .NET applications out there, I don't think there's a great body of knowledge in the cracking community, so for the short term you may have a marginal advantage
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I call this function to remove the last item in a listview in details view. The problem is that the control is on a tab page, and if i call this function before the control has been viewed(ie. before the tab page with this control is shown), this function fails with the inner exception of message "Object reference not set to an instance of an object", and, the regular exception of "unable to create handle". This only happens if the control is not viewed first. Can someone help me out here.
public void RemoveLastItem()
{
int index = Items.Count;
try {
Items.RemoveAt(index-1);
}
catch(OutOfMemoryException e){ // Error is caught here!! Why ????
#if DEBUG
MessageBox.Show(e.InnerException.Message);
MessageBox.Show(e.Message);
#endif
}
catch(NullReferenceException e){
#if DEBUG
MessageBox.Show(e.Message);
#endif
}
}
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Does dotNet will work on Apples Mac OsX in future ???
If not, dotNet is not the right thing, to be base of cross-platform development
Has anybody an idea, what the future with apple ???
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.NET does not necessarily intend to be cross-platform but its design is such that it could be. See the mono project: http://www.go-mono.com/
Kevin
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considering that Microsoft's Rotor project is an implementation of the clr that runs on FreeBSD, I don't think it's such a strech that they could be planning a port for MacOS X.
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I was under the impression that the new OS X was based on FreeBSD.
If this is right, then I don't see why the MONO version of .NET wouldn't run on it.
Cheers,
Simon
"Sign up for a chance to be among the first to experience the wrath of the gods.", Microsoft's home page (24/06/2002)
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Hi all,
I have MS Visual C++ .NET standard installed on my PC.
I created a MFC dialog-based application with the help of wizard.
During compliation I get the following error:
error:C2065: 'ID_FILE_EXIT': undeclared identifier c:\Program\...\afxmsg_.h
error:C2065: 'ID_STUFF_GO': undeclared identifier c:\Program\...\afxmsg_.h
error:C2065: 'hIcon': undeclared identifier c:\Program\...\afxmsg_.h
error:C2065: 'hIconSm': undeclared identifier c:\Program\...\afxmsg_.h
Why I get these errors, have I missed some path info?
Any kind of help in this regard
regards
/rsasalm
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Hi,
I have not touched .NET till now.
But I would like to try some programming now.
My question is can we program .NET in
VC6 ?
Can you please give me some idea on how to
do it ?
PS: Obviously we can use the platform SDK
for programming for .NET(I think).
But I would be missing the Wizards & stuff
in VC.NET.
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Prem Kumar wrote:
My question is can we program .NET in
VC6 ?
No.
I vote pro drink
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This is what I'm looking at doing via code:
Instantiate an instance of IE, direct it to site X and then take a screen shot of the completed page.
How can I do this?
Maybe get a handle to the newly created process and then send a windows message to it and ask it to take a screen dump of itself?
Cheers,
Simon
"Sign up for a chance to be among the first to experience the wrath of the gods.", Microsoft's home page (24/06/2002)
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In XP and .Net Server, you can use the PrintWindow function. In anything else, it gets more complicated. Have a look at this sample on GotDotNet.com for some ideas.
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Thanks.
I gave this a try, but the WindowAsBitmap returns null.
Have you tried this before?
Cheers,
Simon
"Sign up for a chance to be among the first to experience the wrath of the gods.", Microsoft's home page (24/06/2002)
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