Wonderful programming and configuration nuggets can be found here. I only post things I find generally impressive and helpful, so it's worth a gamble.
Tech Tips

 Tuesday, May 20, 2003

Cool tagline: "A single-threaded guy in a multithreaded world."  I totally understand.


1:57:23 PM    comment []
 Friday, May 09, 2003

Rockford Lhotka's site mentions some shifting in publisher ownership.  Much to my surprise Wrox Press has gone belly-up.  APress and Wiley have moved in to cast lots for the scraps.

APress has purchased the bulk of the Peer Information (including Wrox Press) titles. Wiley purchased the Wrox Press brand name and 36 titles, and now the liquidation of the assets is complete with APress buying all remaining assets.

Rocky's book, Visual Basic.NET Business Objects is sold out on the major online retailers.

3500 copies of the book were printed by Wrox Press before they went bankrupt. From what I am hearing, these are sold out so Amazon and bn.com no longer have them. It is possible that you may find a copy in a physical book store, but otherwise I am afraid we'll have to wait until the first Apress printing of the book.

1:36:25 AM    comment []
 Monday, April 21, 2003
 Friday, April 18, 2003

Bob at Wise Solutions emailed to remind me that the Wise Installation System has patching built in, and costs less than InstallShield plus vBuild.

He also pointed out that Wise for Windows Installer now has a ton of features for server setups: user account creation, IIS administration, and SQL Server administration... basically they implemented my entire wish list from working on the FogBUGZ 3.0 installer. Good work!
...
Using patching technology saves a lot of bandwidth, even for the first-time installer, because a lot of the bytes you're distributing may be system files and runtimes that users already have.
...
For now, Michael convinced me to stick with the tried-and-true Inno Setup for the next release of CityDesk. The bandwidth savings don't quite justify the effort of switching installers.

[Joel on Software]

6:18:05 PM    comment []
 Tuesday, April 15, 2003

XmlRpcCS 1.8 [freshmeat.net]

An C# XML-RPC client and server for .NET applications.


2:05:27 PM    comment []

Movable Type templates tutorials. It has been a few weeks since I've visited Mark Pilgrim's blog, but it is always like Christmas when I do. Today's gift was actually posted last week entitled Movable Type templates tutorial. As we begin to discuss using... [Heal Your Church Web Site]

To steal Dean's metaphor, I have my Christmas presents delivered to my news aggregator several times a day.  I was thrilled at the relevance of this post to my current lines of thought.  Then I realized that I had reached a new milestone in blogging.  The blogs I read are about as close to a Vulcan mind meld as I will get.  I have finally tapped into the right blogs so that they are one or two steps ahead of what I need to know.

That's the beauty of blogging.  You can connect with *someone* whose online musings echo what you are thinking.


1:47:52 PM    comment []
 Tuesday, April 08, 2003

Two more LibraryLookup-compatible OPACS. I've added two new OPAC systems to the LibraryLookup bookmarklet generator. Thanks to Chris Tovell, at the Beaverton City Library in Beaverton, OR, for the key that unlocks a number of Polaris libraries. And thanks to Jonathan Rentzsch for the key to Sirsi's WebCat systems. ... [Jon's Radio]

11:26:03 AM    comment []
 Sunday, March 30, 2003

First look at InfoPath.
 

The next version of Microsoft Office is, among other things, a family of XML editors. I have discussed the XML modes of Word and Excel (see XML for the rest of us and "Exploring XML in Office 11"), and described the newest member of this family, InfoPath 2003, a tool for gathering XML data (see "Ten things to know about Xdocs"). Now that I've had a chance to work with InfoPath, its role and value are becoming clearer. [Full story at InfoWorld.com] ... [Jon's Radio]

Cool!!!  I'm getting pretty stoked about the new products in the Office family.  I've been drawn back to Office recently as a worthwhile development platform for small personal solutions like web publishing (not FrontPage, either--we're talking Word-to-XML conversion), mail filtering, Outlook add-ons, Excel XML export, and more.

But as for the new stuff, XML is a major part of the strategy.  OneNote is a different kind of product and fills in the other gap that I see in the personal productivity suite for the power user.  Note taking made natural.

Maybe by summer of 2003, I will find that the combination of products in Office 2003 will make my Notebase idea somewhat unnecessary.

I'll try to post some links to product info pages later.


9:24:17 PM    comment []

OK, I did it.  I changed computers with Radio Userland.  I knew it was going to be a chore, but I got through it.  This article pointed me to some useful scripts, including one called myFixFilePathsAndAddresses that helped with adjust the internal file paths stored in Radio.root because the installation path on my new computer was on a different drive letter (C: --> D:).

Here's the dirt on myFixFilePathsAndAddresses:

This script is an improvement to the one UserLand provides in the workspace.userlandSamples table. If you move your Radio UserLand folder to another location on your hard disk or to another computer then your copy of Radio UserLand will not work. That is because there are many internal references to absolute file paths within the Radio.root. To correct these references download this script and open it from the Radio File > Open menu. Then run the script. It will ask for your prior file path, the default choice should be correct. When the script finishes everything should work again.

I copied my entire www folder from the old installation, the Data Files folder, and Radio.root.  That seemed to do the trick for most things, but I had to tweak the preferences a little to restore my old settings.  At some point, everything popped back into place, but I'm not exactly sure what order I did things in, so I can't give an explicit tutorial here.  The articles mentioned above should help though.

I'm finding though, that since I moved my Radio installation from an always-on static IP address to a frequently-moving laptop computer, that there are certain disadvantages to not being able to remotely post from anywhere.  Having a server handle upstreaming in the background while I go about my daily life can be a plus sometimes.  Hmmm... We'll see how it goes.


9:11:41 PM    comment []

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