To avoid information overload, I will Blog the links that were interesting but not requiring immediate action. Most of these links come from Sage pushing RSS feeds into FireFox—so take note of this you end-user researchers! The non-scaleable concept of surfing the Web no longer exists for this end-user. I sample the web with dozens of narrow probes.
“Avoiding spam-bots” by Ralph Arvesen opens the subject of removing references to email addresses because of spam ‘bots. The path leads to using the email form to “assemble” an email address from “something”… I don’t see why encryption is needed when a key passed to an XML dataset can be used. Hazy on this one.
“One parameter to rule them all: Part 2” on dev4net.com is taken as design guidance. Pass a type, a complex XML type to the Web service. Makes sense to me.
The article “How To Create an ASP.NET Application from Multiple Projects for Team Development” will probably be outdated by the time I need to work in a team.
The article “.NET scripting, a new approach” is currently a novelty piece. Perhaps my academic powers will engulf this topic in future.
The CodeProject.com article “A C# class to make your ASP.NET pages XHTML valid” should be made obsolete in a few months. But it still haunts me just in case the RTM of ASP.NET 2.0 does not comply with XHTML.
I assume that the CodeProject.com article “Boxing and UnBoxing in C#” is more academic than practical. I may be wrong later.
I expect to reach the luxury level at UCLA where an article like “Pushing HTML content to a Blackberry” will be needed since Blackberry devices are running around MCCS.
The article “MycroXaml” is interesting. This XAML-like implementation looks free of charge.
This article “Paging with Repeater control in ASP.NET” is out there in case of a sudden need. I’m just letting me know.
This entry was posted on Friday, January 21st, 2005 at 3:50 pm and is filed under kinté links, kinté space news, root. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.
re: My C-Omega Article Published
re: My C-Omega Article Published