Friday, February 12, 2010

Live on Earth? Then you live in a earthquake zone (your local activity may vary). When should you think about preparing for one? Um… Now!

FEMA - FEMA Asks: Are You Earthquake Prepared?

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Midwesterners expect and prepare for a variety of seasonal hazards such as extreme snow, ice, flooding, tornadoes and severe weather. But the non-seasonal threat of earthquakes may not register on every family’s hazard scale.

That’s why the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Region VII is urging residents to become “Earthquake Prepared” by exercising a few safety measures to help prepare themselves for earthquakes and disasters of all types.

Even though earthquakes are not frequent, residents should know what to do before, during and after one hits:

Before an earthquake occurs:

  • Consider purchasing earthquake insurance.
  • Buy a 20-gallon garbage can and fill it with emergency supplies.
  • Consider retrofitting your home to make it more resistant to earthquake damage.
  • Educate your children about earthquake safety.
  • Anchor heavy furniture, shelves, cupboards and appliances to the walls or floor. -
  • Store dangerous chemicals such as flammable liquids and poisons in a secure place.
  • Learn how to shut off the gas, electricity and water.
  • Have money in savings for post-catastrophic expenses that aren’t covered by your earthquake insurance policy. These expenses may include higher insurance deductible and repair or replacement claims that exceed your policy limits.

When an earthquake hits, what to do if you’re indoors:

  • DROP to the ground;
  • Take COVER by getting under a sturdy table or other piece of furniture; and
  • HOLD ON until the shaking stops.  Cover your face and head with your arms and crouch in an inside corner of the building.
  • Stay away from glass, windows, outside doors and walls, and anything that could fall
  • Stay in bed if you are there when the earthquake strikes. Hold on and protect your head with a pillow, unless you are under a heavy light fixture that could fall. In that case, move to the nearest safe place.
  • Stay inside until shaking stops and it is safe to go outside. Research has shown that most injuries occur when people inside buildings attempt to move to a different location inside the building or try to leave.
  • Be aware that the electricity may go out or the sprinkler systems or fire alarms may turn on.

When an earthquake hits, what to do if you’re outdoors:

  • Stay there. Drop, Cover and Hold.
  • Move away from buildings, streetlights, and utility wires.
  • Once in the open, stay there until the shaking stops. The greatest danger exists directly outside buildings, at exits, and alongside exterior walls. Ground movement during an earthquake is seldom the direct cause of death or injury. Most earthquake-related casualties result from collapsing walls, flying glass, and falling objects.

…”

FEMAEarthquake

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FEMAEarthquake Publications and Resources(Individuals and Homeowners)

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Earthquake Publications and Resources(Individuals and Homeowners) - Earthquake Home Hazard Hunt Poster

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Look, it’s not hard. It’s nothing to be scared about. It’s just smart. Prepare a little at a time. Make it a family project or event. Whatever you need to do, just start doing it. Baby steps, little at a time and you’ll be amazed how quickly you’ll become better prepared for whatever happens.

The more you sweat and prepare now, the less you’ll bleed later (errr… scary… sorry… Army training flashback… but you get the idea… )

 

So do I walk the walk? Mostly. For the last 5 years, every Christmas I buy my parents and my family “preparedness” gifts (yeah… I know… but they’ll thank me when something happens… lol). So every year we’re building up, and adding too, a set of supplies, a little at a time.

Things I need to do:

  • Strap down stuff. I’ve bought a number of earthquake strap kits, etc. Now I just need to actually install them… lol.
  • Consolidate and build an inventory. We have a bunch of supplies, equipment, things, etc now. But they are in different locations in the house (mostly in the back of closets). I need to take all this stuff, put it in a lockable, water tight and safe location outside the house. While I do that I need to inventory it and note shelf life (like the 5 year water things that are set to expire next year, etc)
  • Bring supplies to work. I have a good number of supplies in my trunk, but I’d also like kits (like Red Cross 3 day packs) for me and my team inside our workplace. (BTW, every year I like to buy a couple Red Cross 3 day packs and stash them in different places, give them to family or friends, etc.)

 

Just some of the things I thought about when preparing:

Power
How/where are you going to charge your Cell if power is out for an extended period? Radios? TV’s? Batteries (fresh ones), generators (on my wish list) and power invertors (i.e. plug stuff into your car)

Cash
No power, no phones, no ATM’s, no Credit Cards… Have cash stashed. Not allot, but how much cash do you carry anymore? None? A couple bucks? Yeah, me too. So if you had to put your hands on some 20’s because the gas station, local store, etc isn’t taking credit cards…?

Living in your backyard
House is unsafe. Local hotels are full. No FEMA trailers. You want to protect your property. Think about what it would take to camp out in your backyard for a few weeks. Think about cooking, cleaning, sanitation (no running water, no flushing), weather, etc

Water
You can live for weeks without food, but in three days without water… Think about caches of clean water. How to clean dirty water.

Pets
They are part of your family too. What about feeding them? etc

And that’s just the tip…

 

Yeah, seems like allot doesn’t it? Well think about thinking about all that just after the ground stop shaking…

 

Related Past Post XRef:
Your Evacuation Plan – Do you have one? The time to make one is now, BEFORE you really need it…
National Preparedness Month: Don’t be afraid.. Be Ready

SQL Server, oh SQL Server, what are you doing, are you well? Let me listen to your heart, your SQL Heartbeat that is…

John Paul Cook - SQL Heartbeat – my favorite free tool

“There are many great scripts available for monitoring SQL Server. But admit it, don’t you miss animation and color? I’ve been using SQL Heartbeat for about two weeks and I really appreciate the animation and color. These features make the output highly effective and easy to grasp. Processes grow larger as they use more resources. Lines appear between processes when locking occurs. I find the tool so useful I leave it up all day on my secondary monitor. There have been several times when the only reason I noticed something important was because of the animated effects catching my eye. …

image…”

SQL SolutionsSQL Heartbeat

Monitor activity on your server for FREE!

  • Monitor server wait categories
  • Monitor IO activity
  • Check your current Cache Hits ratio
  • Analyze your I/O system performance
  • Get details about active processes
  • Display locks and deadlocks

image …”

Free as in free, not even reg-ware… Nice.

This is something I’m sure I’m going to need in the next few weeks (it’s a long story).

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Training Kit – February Release (aka the VS2010 RC Compatible release) – We’re talking 602MB of VS/.Net training stuff here…

Microsoft Downloads - Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Training Kit - February Release

“February Release of the Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Training Kit

File Name: VS2010TrainingKitFebruarySetup.exe
Version: 1.3
Date Published: 2/10/2010
Language: English
Download Size: 199.4 MB


Overview

The Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Training Kit includes presentations, hands-on labs, and demos. This content is designed to help you learn how to utilize the Visual Studio 2010 features and a variety of framework technologies including:

  • C# 4.0
  • Visual Basic 10
  • F#
  • Parallel Extensions
  • Windows Communication Foundation
  • Windows Workflow
  • Windows Presentation Foundation
  • ASP.NET 4
  • Windows 7
  • Entity Framework
  • ADO.NET Data Services
  • Managed Extensibility Framework
  • Visual Studio Team System
This version of the Training Kit works with Visual Studio 2010 RC and .NET Framework 4 RC. [GD: Emphasis Added] 

…”

Holly cow… The download size has grown by 106MB since v1.1. From a compressed 93MB in v1.1 to a compressed 199MB (602MB uncompressed!) in this version. Wow

For a view of the v1.1 and v1.0 check out Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Training Kit - October Preview (aka VS2010 B2 version) released  & A little VS2010/.Net 4 Training Kit with your Beta 1?

 

Here’s a snap from the main page;

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And a snap, via WinDirStat, of the contents. The 602MB isn’t just a ton of videos (there’s actually no “videos” on disk, they are all being hosted and streamed from Channel 9 is seems) but instead just tons of data, doc’s, resources and code.

image

 

Related Past Post XRef:
Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Training Kit - October Preview (aka VS2010 B2 version) released
A little VS2010/.Net 4 Training Kit with your Beta 1?

Visual Studio 2010 Licensing White Paper (includes Team Foundation Server, Lab Management and IntelliTrace)
VS 2010 RC now available for download to the general public (no MSDN Subscription required)
VS2010 RC now available on MSDN Subscribers Download. General availably coming tomorrow (February 10th)
VS2010/.Net 4 release date slips and we get a public RC in February to make up for it (and I’m okay with it)

Visual Studio 2010/.Net 4.0 B2 now available via MSDN Subscribers Download, new SKU names (Ultimate, Premium, Express Combo) and VS2010 launch dates announced
VSTS/TFS2010 Beta 2 coming “real soon” and will have a “Go Live” license (i.e. Now’s the time to start getting ready…)

Using Google Docs to create a public form/survey/contact/etc page – The Soup to Nuts HowTo

msigeek.com - How to Create a Contact Page or a Survey Feedback Form using Google Docs

“Does you job involve collecting surveys and feedbacks? How do you do that? Do you send emails to your team, asking for reviews and manually enter into a sheet? or have a centralized excel sheet and ask everyone to update? – Now let me tell you, thats one sad way of doing., and I reckon.. even you will agree on that!

Now lets come to bloggers/Authors – Most of us have blogs and we all need our readers to connect with us, either for Questions or comments (compliments too..!). For this purpose we use plugins and embed it in our Wordpress/Blogspot blogs. Most of the times, you need to create an account in the plugin site and you really are not sure, if the same plugin will work, when you do a blog update. (Wordpress has frequent updates!!). Thats the compatiblity crisis!

This is where exactly, Google Docs can help you! Docs is a free service from Google, which provides you the same functionalities of Word, Excel and PowerPoint online. This means, you don’t need Office to be installed on your machine. All you need is Internet and just your gmail id (I guess, everyone has it by now.!)

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…”

When I’ve run into people doing this, using Google Docs to create a public form thing (kind of like an InfoPath form, but on the internet and free), I’ve always thought that was kind of neat and wondered how it was done.

Well the msigeek has come to my wondering rescue and provided this great HowTo…

LINQ To BitTorrent Provider [Must resist inserting humorous statement here]

Michael Ballhaus (MCPD + SCJP) - LinqToBitTorrent - a custom .NET Linq provider for BitTorrents

“LINQ to BitTorrent is a custom .NET LINQ query provider implementation that translates LINQ queries into HTTP requests that accesses various BitTorrent search engine APIs and RSS feeds.

…”

CodePlexLinqToBitTorrent

“Project Description

LINQ to BitTorrent is a custom .NET LINQ query provider implementation that translates LINQ queries into HTTP requests that accesses various BitTorrent search engine APIs and RSS feeds. LINQ stands for Language Integrated Query and is one of the core features of Microsoft's .NET Framework 3.5 release. More information can be found via the MSDN website on http://msdn.microsoft.com.

Be sure to visit my Blog for more information including an explanation of the LinqToBitTorrrent provider. (coming soon)

Features

  • Custom query provider that translates LINQ queries into HTTP requests that interact with multiple torrent search engine APIs and RSS feeds.
  • LinqToBitTorrent Blog with documentation
  • Support for proxy configuration for use behind a firewall
  • Live Demo site
  • Ships with full Visual Studio 2008 solution with source code and samples (demo site above included in source code)

image …”

Not something I might use, but come on, that’s just cool…  [Standard “Use for Good Only” statement here]

Possible Windows 7 x64 & Cisco VPN solution? (Don’t, use Shrew Soft VPN Client for Windows instead)

LessThanDot/IT Professionals - If you are suffering from Cisco VPN on 64 bit Windows then use the Shrew Soft VPN client

“By now you probably have heard or seen the complains that there is no viable 64 bit VPN client that will work with a Cisco VPN. I myself either used a Virtual Machine (Virtual Box) or I have a dual boot system where I boot into the Fisher Price looking OS to VPN into work.

Yesterday my suffering ended. I downloaded the Shrew Soft VPN Client For Windows and it has been working great. It will even import Cisco pcf files so that you don't need to configure the VPN client if you already have the Cisco pcf files.

Download the Shrew Soft VPN client here: [GD: click thought for the link… Didn’t want to leach their traffic]

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…”

At work we all want to run Win7 x64, but due to our dependence on the Cisco VPN client we’ve been stuck in x32 land (and the work arounds have not been really viable for us). So when I saw this I dropped what I was doing and passed onto our IT crew… Keeping my fingers crossed that this works out.

Oh BTW, Shrew Soft VPN Client For Windows is donation-ware (i.e. if you like/use it, donate the amount that you feel is right/appropriate/ethical to help keep the project moving forward…)

 

Update 2/11/2010 @ 10:00 AM PST:
According to @MotoWilliams (Eric Willams) the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client has been working great for him on Win7 x64 since Win7 beta days… So looks like there’s a couple options. MAN I love the power of the Net!  :)

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

VS 2010 RC now available for download to the general public (no MSDN Subscription required)

MSDN - Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Release Candidate

“...

Download the RC
Below are many download options for you to choose from. If you have any questions about getting started with ISO files, check out Chuck Sterling's step-by-step guide.

Downloads

Visual Studio

Visual Studio Extensibility

Test Products

Team Foundation Server

.NET Framework

Windows Azure Tools

image …”

Microsoft Downloads - Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate RC – ISO

“Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate simplifies solution development, lowering risk and increasing return. Tools for every stage of the lifecycle, from design and development through test and deployment, let you unleash your imagination and deliver impactful solutions. This download is an ISO image that can be burned to blank media for installation.

…”

Most/all the public downloads are ISO’s, broken into multiple parts/downloads. When/if I see I download list helper post I’ll also post that (i.e. something Brian Keller often does, a list of direct download links you can feed into Free Download Manager, etc to make it easier to download the these multipart ISO’s)

Anyway, what are you doing still reading this? Start downloading!  ;)

 

Related Past Post XRef:
Visual Studio 2010 Licensing White Paper (includes Team Foundation Server, Lab Management and IntelliTrace)

Help for (Visual Studio) Help in VS 2010 (and VS2010 SP1)

VS2010 RC now available on MSDN Subscribers Download. General availably coming tomorrow (February 10th)

VS2010/.Net 4 release date slips and we get a public RC in February to make up for it (and I’m okay with it)

Visual Studio 2010/.Net 4.0 B2 now available via MSDN Subscribers Download, new SKU names (Ultimate, Premium, Express Combo) and VS2010 launch dates announced
VSTS/TFS2010 Beta 2 coming “real soon” and will have a “Go Live” license (i.e. Now’s the time to start getting ready…)

Educational eBook Bonanza Day: 400+ “Free & Open” College and High School Level Textbooks

GoingtoSeminary - 400 Free Online Textbooks

“Thanks to a 2008 California law the Open Educational Resources Center for California now provides over 400 open textbooks to the public.

The site was intended for California’s community-college faulty and staff members, but it is open for anyone to use. …”

Open Educational Resources Center for California

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Open Educational Resources Center for California - Open Textbooks

“View over 400 open textbooks in many subject areas:

Anthropology
Art
Biology
Business
Chemistry
Computer Science
Economics
Education
Engineering
English and Composition
Health
History
Languages and Communications
Literature
Math
Music
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Sciences
Sociology
Statistics and Probability

Find open and free textbooks that may be suitable for use in community college courses from the list of Subjects provided.  For descriptions of these open textbooks, see listings in MERLOT and OER Commons. Most of the textbooks on this list have Creative Commons (CC) open licenses or GNU-Free Document License. Others are U.S. government documents in the public domain (PD).

Many other textbooks are free to view online but are NOT OPEN for reuse and customization. …”

Community College Open Textbook Collaborative

“The Community College Open Textbook Collaborative* (CCOTC), funded by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, is a collection of colleges, governmental agencies, educational nonprofits, and other education-related organizations.

The collaborative provides training for instructors adopting open resources, peer reviews of open textbooks, an online professional network, support for authors opening their resources, and other services. 

What is an "Open Textbook?"

That's what we're working to define. We know it has to be

  • free, or very nearly free,
  • easy to use, get and pass around,
  • editable so instructors can customize content,
  • cross-platform compatible,
  • printable,
  • and accessible so it works with adaptive technology.

That's just the short list.

…”

Community College Open Textbook Collaborative - Open Textbooks by Subject

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Community College Open Textbook Collaborative - Business Open Textbooks

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Community College Open Textbook Collaborative - Computer Science Open Textbooks

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California Leaning Resource Center - Free Digital Textbook Initiative

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Go California! :)

So much to learn, so few brain cells. I want to read the CS books, Science, History, Health and, and…  If I had a Kindle I’d throw all these PDF’s on it. LOL

(via @bdrhoatweet)

Visual Studio 2010 Licensing White Paper (includes Team Foundation Server, Lab Management and IntelliTrace)

Microsoft Downloads - Visual Studio 2010 Licensing White Paper

“This white paper provides an overview of the Visual Studio 2010 product line and the licensing requirements for those products in common deployment scenarios.

Version: 1.0
Date Published: 2/10/2010
Language: English
Download Size: 593 KB - 1.4 MB*


Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2010 provides a comprehensive, highly flexible set of application life-cycle management (ALM) tools. With the introduction of Visual Studio 2010, Microsoft made significant changes to simplify decision-making for customers and make products more accessible. This white paper provides an overview of the Visual Studio 2010 product line and the licensing requirements for those products in common deployment scenarios. If you’re a volume licensing customer for a definitive guide to licensing terms and conditions, see the Microsoft Licensing Product Use Rights (PUR) and applicable licensing agreements. For retail customers the license terms are specified in the End User Licensing Agreement (EULA) included with your product.

…”

33 pages of Visual Studio 2010 (Client editions, Professional, Premium, Ultimate and Test Professional), Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010, Lab Management, Load Testing and IntelliTrace Licensing information.

image  image

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I found the IntelliTrace section interesting…

“IntelliTrace, a new capability in Visual Studio 2010, enables the recording and playback of application execution to help facilitate debugging. This is accomplished by deploying the IntelliTrace diagnostic data adapter (DDA) to the target system as part of the Visual Studio Test Agent, or by deploying the IntelliTrace.exe command-line utility. IntelliTrace files created using either means can be opened and debugged using Visual Studio Ultimate.

IntelliTrace files may be shared among two or more companies as long as all users capturing and debugging IntelliTrace files are licensed with either Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate or Visual Studio Test Professional 2010, depending on the activities they are performing. …

The IntelliTrace DDA and/or IntelliTrace.exe cannot be used:

  • On a device or server in a production environment.
  • For purposes of system or application monitoring.
  • In non-interactive scenarios other than as part of an automated test or debugging-data collection session.

…”

“Survival Skills for Developers”

ardent dev - Survival Skills for Developers

“Let’s suspend reality for a moment and pretend you’re heading out into the woods this weekend. Set aside the fact that you are a software developer and have no business tromping around out in the wilderness.  You’re going to want to take along a few basics:  maybe some matches, a tent or shelter of some sort, a bit of food, and some dry clothes.  To survive you need the right tools / supplies and the skills to use them.

(I bet you see where I’m going with this.)

Back at the office, where your mouse and keyboard fret over your safe return, there awaits an entirely different survival scenario:

Survivor: Cubicle.  Outcode.  Outbuild.  Outlast.

Surviving as a software developer is more than stringing together some lines of code that read and write from a database.  Sure, those are basic skills.  To survive in the woods you obviously need to walk and breathe, but you also need to start a fire and build a shelter.

The following 8 items form a basic survival pack that can get you through most modern software development forests:

image …”

Some interesting thoughts on eight technical skills a software developer needs to “survive.”

Besides technical skills though I think I’d add soft skills;

  • Working well with others
  • Learning to estimate
  • Learning to manage your time
  • Juggling multiple “high priority” items at once
  • Managing your manager/customers/users
  • Learning to say No (in a nice, professional way)
  • Learning to say Yes (there are times when a No should really be a Yes)
  • Learning the delivering is a feature all in of itself

Without soft skills you might be able to “survive” in the summer, but when the cold winter winds blow and “they” are looking for someone to put into the put for dinner…

Hollywood Sign “coverup” tomorrow (Thursday, February 11th)

Los Angeles Metblog - Hollywood sign to be covered this Thursday*

“City Councilman Tom LaBonge participating in cover up. Literally.

An LAPD “community alert” sent to me moments ago reads:

On February 11, 2010 the Hollywood sign will be covered up for an international campaign. The sign will be covered until further notice.

Do not be alarmed, the sign will remain in place and there will be no changes done to the sign. This is just an informational e-mail so we do not receive phone calls from worried citizens.

…”

Los Angeles Times - Hollywood sign coverup part of campaign to purchase Cahuenga Peak

“A nonprofit group plans to cover the Hollywood sign with a banner urging "Save the Peak" this week, announcing its effort to purchase nearby Cahuenga Peak from private developers for $11.7 million.

The leaders of Public Trust for Lands intend to disclose their acquisition effort publicly for the first time Thursday morning in Hollywood. They say they have raised about half of the asking price for the 138-acre mountaintop parcel from a Chicago investment group

Investors had hoped to sell the land for as much as $40 million for home sites. Their plans prompted Hollywood-area City Councilman Tom LaBonge to ask for the San Francisco-based land trust to help preserve the mountaintop.

But police took the edge off the trust's planned surprise by announcing that the Hollywood sign would be covered Thursday as part of “an international campaign” and would remain draped “until further notice.”

…”

I know you all don’t probably care about this, but I thought it was interesting… Hey, it’s the Hollywood Sign!  :)

Help for (Visual Studio) Help in VS 2010 (and VS2010 SP1)

Kimberly Wolk - Help Viewer in Visual Studio 2010 RC (and beyond)

“Tomorrow, February 10th, we’ll be releasing the Visual Studio 2010 Release Candidate to the public. If you didn’t have a chance to evaluate Beta 2, we’re shipping a new Help Viewer with Visual Studio. The new Help Viewer has tight integration with MSDN online providing a product-to-MSDN experience for Search, F1 queries, and on-demand help content updates.

Since Beta 2, we’ve received a lot of feedback from our customers and partners. I want to thank everyone for logging Connect bugs, completing the Beta2 survey, or providing feedback through the forums or other channels. We are listening and we’re addressing as much of your feedback as possible before RTM.

The rest of this post will focus on the improvements we’ve delivered in the RC release and those that are in-flight for RTM. For the RC release, we’ve focused our efforts in the following areas:

  • Keyword Index
  • Help Library Agent
  • Help Library Manager
  • Support for third-party help content
  • F1 Help quality

image …”

I’m glad to see VS Help is really getting some help. While many of us have moved away from internal help to just directly web searching (or remapping our F1’s, etc) there looks like there is some hope for the future.

I’m hoping that what appears to be a complete reworking of the local MSDN/VS Help infrastructure will be just the ticket. We’ll see.

I do have to say I’m not sure about the whole “Help Library Agent” (fka “Help Listener”) thing. It reminds me of the Google Desktop search (aka a pseudo local web server like thing)… But I’m going to give it the benefit of the doubt. Actually working, helping me find stuff and not irritate me with the 5 minute “Rebuilding” aka, “Oh crap I hit F1! Might as well go get some coffee,” delay  will give it a lot of credibility in my mind…

(via The Morning Brew - The Morning Brew #536)

 

Related Past Post XRef:
VS2010 RC now available on MSDN Subscribers Download. General availably coming tomorrow (February 10th)
F1 to the Help Rescue - aka How to make the VS F1 key do what you end up doing anyway...

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

VS2010 RC now available on MSDN Subscribers Download. General availably coming tomorrow (February 10th)

Somasegar's WebLog - Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Release Candidate now available

“Today, we are making available the Release Candidate (RC) for Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 to all MSDN subscribers.  The RC will be made available to the world on Wednesday, February 10th. The RC includes a go-live license for people who want to deploy in their production environment.

…”

Jason Zander's WebLog - Announcing VS2010 / .NET Framework 4 Release Candidate (RC)

“Today I’m pleased to announce we have shipped the RC for Visual Studio 2010 / .NET Framework 4!  MSDN subscribers can download the bits immediately from this location.  The RC will be made available to the public on Wednesday February 10.

We got a lot of invaluable feedback on Beta 2 through Connect as well as your survey responses.  In particular many of you pointed out areas of performance where we were not at parity with VS2008 and it was impacting your ability to adopt the product.  Some of those areas of feedback included general UI responsiveness (including painting, menus, remote desktop and VMs), editing (typing, scrolling, and Intelisense), designers (Silverlight and WPF in particular), improved memory usage, debugging (stepping, managed / native interop), build times, and solution/project load.

…”

MSDN - Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 Release Candidate

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Awesome! I’m looking forward to getting home and trying this on my PDC Acer (since VS2010 B2 was… um… “interesting” to use on it ;)

image

 

Related Past Post XRef:
VS2010/.Net 4 release date slips and we get a public RC in February to make up for it (and I’m okay with it)
Visual Studio 2010/.Net 4.0 B2 now available via MSDN Subscribers Download, new SKU names (Ultimate, Premium, Express Combo) and VS2010 launch dates announced
VSTS/TFS2010 Beta 2 coming “real soon” and will have a “Go Live” license (i.e. Now’s the time to start getting ready…)

Monday, February 08, 2010

Windows PowerShell Quick Reference Guide Updated

Microsoft Downloads - Windows PowerShell Quick Reference

“Quick-reference guide to commonly-used Windows PowerShell commands.

File Name: powershell_reference_Feb2010.doc
Version: 1.0
Date Published: 2/8/2010
Language: English
Download Size: 71 KB


Quick reference guide to commonly-used Windows PowerShell commands. For best results, open the file in Microsoft Word, print the contents to legal-sized paper (8 inches by 14 inches), and fold the resulting printout in half, making a four-page booklet.”

You know me, a sucker for Quick Reference Guides… :)

image

 

Related Past Post XRef:
PowerShell Quick Reference & Graphical Help File(chm)
New Free (Regware) PowerShell 8 Page Reference Card
New TFS & PowerShell (Beta) Posters from DRP

Ever said to yourself, “I wonder what this meeting is costing us…”?

TechCrunch - MEETorDIE Quantifies The Cost Of Wasteful Meetings

“Company meetings are a nearly universally hated thing. No matter what line of work you’re in, most are simply a waste of time. And even when they’re important and necessary, they’re still likely inefficient. A new startup aims to show you just how wasteful they are.

MEETorDIE is an online tool that asks you to put in information about your meeting, including what company you work for, what industry you’re in, how big the company is, how long the meeting is, and who is attending. When you submit that information, you’re taken to a page that shows how much money your company wasted with that meeting. Below that, you can see the aggregate statistics for how much money your company has wasted on meetings total.

Depending on how wasteful your meeting is, MEETorDIE’s mascot, Goolah, will be shown in different precarious situations incorporating imagery from other popular startups, such as Foursquare and Twitter. More importantly, MEETorDIE suggests how the money being wasted during these meetings might be better spent, such as donating money for drinking water for Africa.

…”

MEETorDIE.com

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I love the subtitle… :p

Sunday, February 07, 2010

A Feed You Should Read #23 – The Code Project

If you ask a developer how they like to learn new technology, techniques, etc nearly all will say, “The code, baby! Show me some code…!”

Today’s Feed is one of the premier sites for developers, by developers which revels in the code, baby!

The Code Project

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Background:

I love The Code Project. I’ve found more cool things on this site than I can count. Almost every day there’s some project that I want to capture for future reference. Best of all is the fact that the articles are by developers, for developers.

How often have you used the Net to solve a coding problem, or to learn something? Yeah, like a million times. Me too. Yet were would we be if everyone was a consumer and no one a producer?

That’s what draws me to the Code Project, easy it makes sharing, to help you be a producer. You don’t need to be a “A Lister”, have a deal with a publisher/site, be a name in our field, a blog, yada, yada. You just need to desire, and code. Sharing a cool project, technique, solution to difficult development problem or bit of code is simple, easy and free.

The act of paying it forward is what gives this site its true power.

Why do I like this feed and think you might also?

Learn by seeing code?

Like to see people talk about and code cool stuff?

Code in in .Net, MFC/C++, ASP, C#, VB?

Want to give back a little yourself?

The Code Project is a site and feed for you…

Snap of the latest posts:

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Blog Information:

Name: The Code Project
URL: http://www.codeproject.com/
Feed: http://www.codeproject.com/webservices/articlerss.aspx?cat=1 (All Topics)
Post Types: Development (aka Code) project articles (most with source)

 

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