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December 2004 - Posts

Team System prezzies

In the spirit of the holidays (either late in the case of Hanukkah, Ramadan or Solstice — or early in the case of Christmas or Kwanzaa — and I have no clue what holiday Jedis celebrate around now) the Team System team have brought unto you a gift. A new

Still time for one more headache in 2004

I know I've promised to be good, and I've sucked the life out of any possible controversial topic off of this blog. So, to finish up the year, it's time to get myself in trouble again. The MSDN stats report came out for November, and I noticed a few tasty

Jobs, jobs, jobs (ASP.NET edition)

While I wouldn't normally post job openings for "just anyone", Scott certainly isn't just anyone. He's the Software Architect for one of the first companies I had the pleasure of working with when .NET was still in the glimpse stage, as well as one of

Internet Explorer Developer Center

And then there were 50... OK, maybe there aren't 50 Developer Centers (yet — it just feels that way some days), but there is now an Internet Explorer Dev Center. With new content, even! Learn what SP2 and future advances have in store for you. It's worth

ASP.NET Member Management Component Prototype now available

The Microsoft ASP.NET v1.1 Membership Management Component Prototype contains classes that allow a developer to more easily authenticate users, authorize users, and store per-user property data in a user profile. The authentication feature validates and

YABRT: Yet Another Blog Ranking Tool

While browsing my Bloglines subscriptions, I see that there is yet another tool available for monitoring the "importance" of blogs -- PubSub . From their site: LinkRanks are a measure of how many pages link to each particular site, with more weight given

This must be in the frequently asked questions, isn't it?

I want to get a FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) list up for ASP.NET, but before I do I have a few questions for you. Would this be a useful addition to the site? If no, go to #4 below If yes, what format? Should I use a similar format to the C# FAQ ?

ClickOnce from the RDs

Sorry, this actually went live on the 1st, but I'm a little behind. The latest article from the Microsoft Regional Directors (in this case Mauro Sant'Anna of Brazil) has been posted: Deploying Windows Forms Applications with ClickOnce

NOAA Way -- the Web Service

Looking at my news items this morning, and what do I see? NOAA (the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency, aka, the Weather Guys) now has a Web Service available (sadly RPC/Encoded) to get the weather. Details here . WSDL here . Party on your desktop

We have many questions...

Scott Mitchell 's latest playpen is something I've been looking to find for a while -- a FAQ system built on ASP.NET. Multicategory, pumps out RSS feeds, what else could you want (besides a download) So far, it looks pretty r0xx0r (sorry, I've been spending
 
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