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DCOM D-Mystified.NET 2003: A DCOM Tutorial, Step 1

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7 Jan 2009CPOL13 min read 68.5K   818   56  
This tutorial guides you through the step-by-step details of how to use Visual Studio .NET 2003 to develop DCOM client/server applications.

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Compare Revision Minor Date Status Editor
3 - publicly available No 7-Jan-09 5:49 Available Deeksha Shenoy
2 No 7-Jan-09 5:49 Composing
1 No 16-Jan-07 23:14 Composing

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


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Dr. Brian Hart obtained his Ph.D. in Astrophysics from the University of California, Irvine in 2008. Under Professor David Buote, Dr. Heart researched the structure and evolution of the universe. Dr. Hart is currently employed as a Astrodynamicist / Space Data Scientist with Point Solutions Group in Colorado Springs, CO supporting Space Operations Command, United States Space Force. Dr. Hart is a Veteran of the U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy, having most recently served at Fort George G. Meade, MD as a Naval Officer with a Cyber Warfare Engineer designator. Dr. Hart has previously held positions at Jacobs Engineering supporting Cheyenne Mountain/Space Force supporting tests, with USSPACECOM/J58 supporting operators using predictive AI/ML with Rhombus Power, and with SAIC supporting the Horizon 2 program at STARCOM. Dr. Hart is well known to the community due to his over 150 technical publications and public speaking events. Originally from Minneapolis/Saint Paul, Minnesota, Dr. Hart lives in Colorado Springs with his Black Lab, Bruce, and likes bowling, winter sports, exploring, and swimming. Dr. Hart has a new movie coming out soon, which is a documentary called "Galaxy Clusters: Giants of the Universe," about his outer space research. The movie showcases the Chandra X-ray Observatory, one of NASA’s four great observatories and the world’s most powerful telescopes for detecting X-rays. The movie has been accepted for screening at the USAFA Planetarium and will highlight the need of updating and maintaining X-ray telescopes for scientific advancement.

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