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April 2005 - CraigBlog
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The recent debate ( here , here , and here , amongst others) might lead you to believe there are two ways to design a web service: code-first and contract-first. A surface reading of the debate seems to indicate that you either write a bunch of classes...
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On a recommendation from Brad Wilson , I've switched from using WMP to iTunes. I'm not sure I'm going to stick with it, but so far I like it. But one problem that was bugging me was how to get the “Now Playing” feature of MSN Messenger 7.0...
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I've had some fairly serious problems with comment spam on this blog - literally hundreds of bogus comments on some days. I've been trying to keep on top of it, but it's a pain. Now, thanks to the efforts of Keith Brown , a CAPTCHA feature has been implemented...
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Looking at this chart , it's unclear to me if I'm going to have to cough up for a VSS license in addition to dropping money on VS2005. Of course, I've never been too clear on VSS licensing in the first place. (And frankly, I'd pay quite a bit not to have...
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This one came up on the FlexWiki mailing list the other day. I should have known it, but I missed it, and it's worth spreading around. A user complained that their FlexWiki install would periodically respond very slowly. The wiki was under very light...
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Got this one in my email today. I thought it was too funny not to share: Dear Dr. Internet: I am afraid that I'm becoming a network nerd. How can I tell for sure? Sincerely, Geek-or-not Dear Geek-or-not: How many syllables do you think there are in the...
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OK, we've all been to a conference talk or two that sounded like the author had been smoking the thesaurus. But this beats them all: some MIT students wrote a program that randomly generated a meaningless conference talk paper. Then they submitted it...
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It looks like James Newkirk (of NUnit fame) is switching jobs . He's going to be helping to develop the next generation of GotDotNet. I say, fantastic! First of all, you all know that I think GotDotNet sucks . I like SourceForge much better, but not so...
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Ted Neward recently blogged about Tim's XSLTO project. If I might be so bold as to summarize Ted's argument: XSLTO looks like AOP. Tim thinks XSLTO is good. Therefore, Tim thinks AOP is good. This is so full of holes you could strain your pasta through...
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