| |
 |
Wednesday, May 15, 2002 |
At a high level, the CLR is simply an engine that takes in IL instructions, translates them into machine instructions, and executes them. This does not mean that the CLR is interpreting the instructions. Article. May 14, 2002.
9:14:03 PM
|
|
Performance counters enable you to monitor and analyze the behavior of physical components such as processors, disks, and memory; system objects such as processes, threads, events, mutexes, and semaphores; and even aspects of your own running applications. They can help you identify system and application bottlenecks and fine-tune system and application performance. Article. May 14, 2002.
9:12:09 PM
|
|
Web services will likely gain adoption, but the fundamental question relates to the extent of their impact: Will they reshape technology processes, business processes, or even entire industries? What key events need to occur on both the supply side and the demand side to aid the business case for Web services? These 10 items help illuminate some of the hurdles Web services face, but it's up to natural evolution to determine their eventual success or failure. Article. May 15, 2002.
9:10:31 PM
|
|
© Copyright 2002 Sam Gentile.
|
|
|
|
|