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Daily Archives: October 20, 2004
Val the C# Gal
Sounds like a song doesn’t it? But it’s a new blog by Valerie Winberg of Minnesotta. Val is a C# programmer with a VB background. Thanks Avonelle for pointing her out!!
So I wonder if this could inspire a new tune from Band on the Runtime.
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Rory’s second year at XML DevCon
Last year Rory was just another [wierd] guy at the xml dev con. Then he wrote about seeing Chris Sells and Don Box in the men’s room. And he wrote and he wrote and he wrote. Now Rory is a Microsoft employee (in a dream job for him) and is back at XML DevCon only 1 year later (well not really one year since last years’ was in July) and whadya know, in case you haven’t heard yet, he’s writing hilarious stuff about the conference.
It’s interesting reading Rebecca Dias’ analysis of Tim Bray’s talk and the reading Rory’s. And so far Becky’s got the best shoes.
Fun with XML DevCon from 3,000 miles away
There are so many great postings from each session. Becky Dias, Shawn Morrissey, Chris Pels, Robert Hurlbut and John Gossman oh and Scott Hanselman, too! have been keeping us well informed and others probably too I haven’t read. So I am definitely feeling in the spirit, sitting here with some Chili Lime Tortilla chips, tomatilla salsa and a Corona, reading about Tim Bray’s, Chris Anderson’s, Don Box’s and even a talk that thrilled all of the gamers from the Dept of Defense.
Of course I wish I was there. Well, no I wish the whole conference was here! 🙂
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Scott Hanselman funny top 10 list
Scott’s Top 10 dirty little xml secrets. Very very funny.
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My own darned icons
I got sick of trying to figure out what to do about icons in my ink blogging application and just wasted the morning creating my OWN. Some are just from scratch, some take the images that are part of the Microsoft dev tools SDKs and modified them a bit.
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I finally gave up on finding a little infinity sign for doing a hyperlink and the butterfly is for inserting images.
Now, to either get back to my original plan this morning – adding categories to Blink, or actually doing some work for my clients, working on some articles or my presentations for Connections.
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Show me the MOBILE code and win a MOBILE device
The Mobility Road Show is well under way and Microsoft is now ready to trade your mobile application samples for a Smart Phone, Pocket PC or other mobile device.
Read more about this awesome contest on Thom Robbins weblog.
Happy Again – debugging WSE2 Samples
Now that I have just refreshed the WSE2 samples with their original versions (thanks Bristowe), I am very happily debugging through them to see Don Smith’s lovely code for creating and issuing custom security tokens. My frustration had a lot to do with the fact that I know there is a goldmine of info in the samples and stepping through them with the debugger brings me so much farther than just reading explanations that don’t cover every single step.
And now I grok this stuff well enough to dare to dig in again and start mucking with it.
Here are some tricks about debugging into web services and into httphandlers that you never really understand until you have to use them.
Debugging web services from a windows client is sometimes a real mystery. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t and I never really understood.
I had this experience when debugging into the custom username token manager – sometimes I just couldn’t get at the code. (John Robbins ….I need to read your book cover to cover and that is all there is to it!!!) Hervey Wilson reminded me of Debug/Processes which helped enormously. I learned finally how to attach to a process that I couldn’t get into normally to debug. With the custom security token it was a bit different since I needed to attach to an httphandler that was not loaded before I needed it. Here you just need to attach to the aspnet worker process (aspnet_wp.exe) when you are at a point in your code that you know it is being used – and tada – you can debug into the http hander. In the case of the CustomXML Security Token Sample, the httphandler is where all the goodies were.
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The .NET world is my oyster
One of the downsides to being part of our incredible international community is that everytime some awful news hits the press, no matter what part of the world it is in, I start worrying about people I know who live there. Oh – I am a big worrier – as I try to explain to my husband …it’s my job to constantly worry about “what if”. We all do, as programmers, right?
Changes at TheServerSide.NET
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