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New year, new article

Well, I *think* yesterday was an official MSFT holiday (I wasn't here, anyway), so today was really the first day of the new year for new headlines and articles. So, we start the year with an article by someone named "Kent Sharkey". He's a (relatively)

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

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

MSDN += new RssFeeds() ';

Duncan has been working on our new RSS generation system . The new one he's created should be more flexible, accurate and up-to-date. He's looking for feedback on the new format as well. There are two changes we're really interested in feedback. First,

Dino visits Bedrock...

Dino brings you his latest -- an excellent article discussing using inheritance to add features to common ASP.NET classes, like the Page class. He shows how you can add page refresh, long process handing and more to *all* your pages in one fell swoop.

That's cool -- we need that

It's Saturday night -- what do losers like Kent do? Poke around, trying to learn PHP. I just came across something that is probably old news -- PEAR (the PHP Extension and Application Repository). It's an application, a database, and more. 5 minutes after

Come and get it!

Sorry for the delay. The ASP.NET Resource Kit is NOW AVAILABLE. Details at http://msdn.microsoft.com/asp.net/asprk/ . For those who downloaded it last week, don't bother, it hasn't changed. Spread the news far & wide! Let's see if you can break our

More ASP.NET controls

Scott Hanselman writes about some controls I have to take a look at by Peter Blum . http://www.hanselman.com/blog/PermaLink.aspx?guid=5291897b-8f7f-4289-b1d7-6ba6c381892b I trust Scott's opinion on this (actually, I'd trust his opinion on just about everything

Web Wizards, without the mess

via William Bartholomew : Fritz Onion has posted an interesting article about how to write ASP.NET projects without using Web Projects and the associated bindings to IIS etc. http://staff.develop.com/onion/Samples/aspdotnet_without_web_projects.htm TTFN

Where'd it go? (was ASP.NET Resource Kit)

A few people noticed an interesting download appear (and now disappear) from the MSDN downloads center. We crave your patience. It will return soon, we just need to get some pages up first. I'll let you know once it's back and available. In the meantime,

What's new in ASP.NET Whidbey?

Just sent up a new article from the fine Stephen Walther on some more of the new features in ASP.NET Whidbey. This one in particular blew my little mind: Rich XML Data Binding The ASP.NET ”Whidbey” data controls support a variety of rich data

User Agent strings

A nice survey of many of the available User Agent strings that may hit your sites. (OK, 90% of them may be one of them, but please, please don't forget the others) http://www.zytrax.com/tech/web/browser_ids.htm TTFN - Kent
 
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