Devsource is having a trivia contest with a prize of this hot little number from Acer.
this is the official Ferrari Red – I think Acer licensed it. Now if only it they could make a Ferrari tablet … 🙂
Devsource is having a trivia contest with a prize of this hot little number from Acer.
this is the official Ferrari Red – I think Acer licensed it. Now if only it they could make a Ferrari tablet … 🙂
A few weeks back I got a chance to chat with the ever impressive Dan Appleman on one of the dotnetrocks shows. We teased him about his non-blogging. He had started a blog on APress and wrote three posts and stopped. Hmmm, I wonder if that had an effect, because he started blogging again at www.danappleman.com and he has already written a bunch of great posts. Thanks Kathleen for pointing it out.
Yes, let me get this out of the way. I have a FoxPro 2.6 application I still use to run a project for a client. In fact, I use the windows version to do the data entry and the DOS version to print out 300 pages of reports for them monthly. (All this STILL on Windows XP SP1 – thank you Raymond Chen & co.!)
However, I have a new computer. It is 2.8 ghz and has 2 GB of RAM. It’s the speed that is creating a problem, not the O/S.
I have found ONE documentation of this problem anywhere on the web and it was on www.experts-exchange.com so I thought I would also make note of it here. It wasn’t until I read the thread, that I realized the pattern.
FoxPro 2.6 still works, but after about 24 hours of uptime on the computer, it stops working with this error message when you try to start up FoxPro.
The Win16 SubSystem has insufficient resources to continue running. Click on OK, close your applications, and restart your machine.
I have mucked with file handles and all types of settings to no avail. Right now my solution is to reboot. But I will eventually juggle some computers around. Give Rich the one I just stopped using which is a little faster and newer and has USB ports and use his computer for doing this process. This is acceptable. It’s an old program. But I’m worried about the hundred or so people out there who use a foxpro real estate application I wrote and rely heavily on it. I have explained the problem pretty clearly on the support page for that product, but I think it will be a while before these people have to worry about this.
In the meantime, I need to test it on sp2, though I trust it will be fine.
for google: win 16 win16 fpw26 foxpro 2.6 foxprow
Update Jan 2006: I have loaded both FoxPro 2.6 Windows and FoxPro DOS on Windows Vista CTP 5270 and run some applications. I haven’t tested them throroughly (and not done enough testing to check on the problem that this post is about, but they run!)
I didn’t until today. http://www.vtsbdc.org/
“The SBDC mission is to strengthen existing business entities, and assist start-ups through high quality, no cost counseling, and high quality, affordable training programs”
What an awesome resource. It’s not uncommon for many of us developers who are contractors or small consulting firms to want some basic advice (maybe accounting or legal) but it doesn’t seem to justify the high cost of a lawyer or accountant.
I thought this was notable. Nice job Gavin. Hard work indeed.
Gavin follows up with some insight on why he did this and how he prepared.
I am on the steering committee for a new group being formed in Vermont, the Vermont Software Developers Association (working title maybe). The steering committee meetings are getting more frequent as we head to our goal of having our first official meeting at the end of September in downtown Burlington. There are statewide and regional software developer associations around the country. This is going to help Vermont businesses who are in teh business of software (consultants, contractors or vertical market software companies), regardless of the technology they use, share their business knowledge and hopefully help the rest of the world with this common problem of being shocked when they here there are software companies in Vermont. Vermont is so well known for its maple syrup, cheese, Ben & Jerry’s and of course our cows. There is a LOT of tech going on here. A lot of very good tech. Just looking at the Microsoft spectrum here, we have had a lot of developer’s and companies on board with .NET since the very beginning and now many are pretty advanced. Anyway, I’m very excited about this. I will be contacting people from different sda’s around the country to see if anyone would be willing to talk with us to give us ideas of what has and hasn’t worked for them. Unfortunately becuase part of most of the SDA’s goals is to promote their area’s business, there is a slight conflict of interest. But hopefully, I can find some folks who will see past that and just grok the good for the software developers as a whole.
Congrats to Ted Neward. His latest book has just shipped. (Isn’t it Ted that does the happy jig or something?)
I’m still pretty focused on the security related ws specs but will eventually reach out further. Therefore I’m definitley interested in all that’s going on and here is the next step.
John Bristowe went through the current spec and lists what is new for those of you who are trying to keep on top of this.
Benjamin Mitchell points to a thoughtful article by Gregor Hohpe on keeping some perspective on the WS-Specs as well as leveraging all of the intelligence that has gone into creating them to at least consider as a design checklist. Benjamin also highlights Gregor’s point that web services are not always the answer to a problem that you think they will solve.
As I get deeper into trying to sort out WS Specs and WSE, all of this input is really helpful.
The Acer got SP2’d when I cleaned it up to return to mhy client. I am going to install some of their custom software on it just to see how things go.
My Compaq EVO which I use solely for Whidbey work just got SP2’d and yes, Whidbey still opens up <g>
I have yet to do my Toshiba which is onthe last beta already although I’m a little more hesitant as I’m doingn some of my real development on this tablet.
Then of course is my real development box – my money maker. I’m just not emotionally ready to do it yet.
Last will be Rich’s computer, which is still on Win2000 because we have to go buy a new scanner first (that hpscanjet 5 won’t work on winxp)