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Browser Bookmark Archive

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.

Spam ‘bots

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.

WS Parameter

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.

Premature Prep’ for Being a Dev’ Lead

The article “How To Create an ASP.NET Application from Multiple Projects for Team Development” will probably be outdated by the time I need to work in a team.

Scripting in C# 

The article “.NET scripting, a new approach” is currently a novelty piece. Perhaps my academic powers will engulf this topic in future.

XHTML Promised in ASP.NET 2.0

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.

Value Types and Reference Types

I assume that the CodeProject.com article “Boxing and UnBoxing in C#” is more academic than practical. I may be wrong later.

UCLA Technical Optimism

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.

Rolling Your Own XAML

The article “MycroXaml” is interesting. This XAML-like implementation looks free of charge.

No Current Need or Lead to the Repeater Control

This article “Paging with Repeater control in ASP.NET” is out there in case of a sudden need. I’m just letting me know.

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