August, 2008

Posts
  • Optio praetorri

    .NET isn't a bit slow

    • 1 Comments
    I needed a program that could do layers and web graphics. I found this: http://www.getpaint.net/ -- Paint.net, a Microsoft mentored senior design project. It is open source. It is very fast. And I think I'm going to like it more than Photoshop. Of course...
  • Optio praetorri

    Learning Objects

    • 1 Comments
    I have determined my topic for my first training triage: "Writing a WMI Instance Provider". Since everyone in the training will be on a corporate network, I have a wide variety of tools available to make the presentation an interesting one. Notably...
  • Optio praetorri

    My favorite working tools

    • 0 Comments
    Suppose you have an application running on a customer's machine. They inform you that the application has been unable to create something, or unable to read something. You suspect some kind of issue with the permissions the program has to read or write...
  • Optio praetorri

    But I have a token ....

    • 1 Comments
    From the earliest days of Windows NT, even before Active Directory was on the scene, every process has an associated security token. To see the information contained in the token, if you are using the windbg debugger, you can use the !token meta-command...
  • Optio praetorri

    WMI Books

    • 0 Comments
    WMI, or Windows Management Instrumentation, is the standard method used by Windows to monitor and control services on network computers. Perhaps the first place to go to learn about WMI is the Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Management_Instrumentation...
  • Optio praetorri

    A few book notes ...

    • 1 Comments
    Noticed that people are already seeing this blog ... that is certainly interesting. Different people learn in different ways. Some people learn by experimenting with a technology. Some learn by formulating different search queries to their favorite...
  • Optio praetorri

    Who am I, and why am I here?

    • 2 Comments
    My name is Drew Arrowood, and I am the newest engineer on the ADSI/WMI/Cluster Services/Powershell team. I'm located in Charlotte, North Carolina, Microsoft's largest East Coast location, which happens to be off Arrowood road. This isn't my first team...
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