This guy means ASP.Net and if hes the guy i'm thinking of its for a class at college, he showed up in #dotgnu on freenode the other day asking a similar question, JSP and Ruby don't do any good for his instructor.
Steel is stronger so maybe they could use less, and not add too much weight. Of course every ounce they add will cost someone in shipping.
I wouldn't count on that too much. Alluminum preassure tanks are much larger than steel preassure tanks, but with half the weight. A steel case half the size should weigh at least twice as much as the alluminum one and yet they are making these steel cases 1 inch wider, so it soundsl ike theres more mass, not less.
My point is that this will begin to change, a lot of the people who goto SLU are going to stay in Louisiana as they do the demand for tech jobs will grow, which will mean tech jobs will begin to come in due to the cheaper wages they will be able to get away with, its supply and demand. There are actually quite a few tech jobs already here, did you know that the software many banks use is written in Baton Rouge?
Right now there is a LOT of graphics designers out of work, the largest advertising agency in louisiana (lamar) closed up its graphics division and layed off quite a few people. So the eggs are there, just need the chickens.
you do know the story about SLU don't you? How some board member from ibm graduated there and now wasnt it to be some big tech school so he has begun pouring money into it so that people will be impressed when he says he went to SLU... the tech boom has begun more or less with that, try some comp sci courses at SLU.
Meaning my 30 year old gasoline car has a top speed higher than this, and it weighs 4000 lbs to boot. It will be some time before hybrids shake off the picture in the publics mind of a slow underpowered car.
You do realize.Net is the replacement for Pe executables for longhorn don't you? the only thing being phased out is System.Windows.Forms, and its being replaced with avalon. However System.Windows.Forms will continue to be supported for quite some time.
DotGNU's widgets come out looking and feeling like windows widgets, GTK# doesnt come with mono for windows, System.Windows.Forms comes with DotGNU. Software written for DotGNU will run under.Net, software written for Mono won't neciscarily run under.Net.
http://www.dotgnu.org/, that has portions of System.Windows.Forms implemented, as well as parts of the 2.0 api implemented. Best of all it runs on Linux, Windows, OSX, BeOS and several handheld computers from what i understand. While its not a full implentation of the api, it will be eventually.
Yes and when the four-stroke otto cycle engine is patented then the four-stroke miller cycle engine is invented to get around it, and when carbueration is patented, fuel injection is invented to get around it, and when cast iron manifolds are patented, tubuler steel headers are invented to get around it. All of these systems are superior to the systems they replace, yet we only use one out of those 3 in most cars.
Other components like Windows.Forms, Directory.Services, Enterprise Services and JScript are being developed but are not as mature as the other components but are under development by various people.
Both of these quotes appear to be out of context, i'm not even sure where the first one comes from and the second one is in respect to running VisualStudio.NET programs under the current version of mono.
And for what reason cant it be a full cross-platform implementation. the only parts they intend to leave out are things in the Microsoft.* namespace. and a lot of those they are implementing in the Mono.* namespace. when mono 2.0 is finished, you should be able to run anything not depending on something in the Microsoft.* namespace.
And how old is mono? mono is just starting up, their goal isnt even to get api compatibility untill 2.0. and people are running mono in production environments with xsp already.
I developed a.Net application without cross platform in mind at all, and immediately it ran under DotGNU's Portable.NET. and microsoft has expressed an interest in alternative implementations of.NET. according to the Mono faq at http://www.mono-project.com/about/faq.html#msft
Question 38: Is Microsoft helping Novell with this project?
There is no high level communication between Novell and Microsoft at this point, but engineers who work on.NET or the ECMA groups have been very friendly, and very nice to answer our questions, or clarify part of the specification for us.
Microsoft is interested in other implementations of.NET and are willing to help make the ECMA spec more accurate for this purpose.
Have you used.Net? it is actually quite decent, and if you really need libraries it is possible to make calls to windows dlls. Perhaps you should give it a try, its not just a Java clone. When it matures a bit it will be an excellent way to achieve cross platform applications.
My only complaint so far about sharpdevelop is that its a bit slow starting up, however ngen seems to speed it up a bit. My understanding of VS.NET is that it does some extra trickery wherein the executables it produces actually contain x86 code and for the most part just use the.Net api instead of using the vm. This would explain why VS.NET is so much faster than #Develop.
Because grandma won't be trying, the only problem with their instructions is that you're expecting something to happen as soon as you click the link. Thats not what happens, it happens later when you've browsed a bit and click a popup.
This guy means ASP.Net and if hes the guy i'm thinking of its for a class at college, he showed up in #dotgnu on freenode the other day asking a similar question, JSP and Ruby don't do any good for his instructor.
I dunno bout where you live but my girlfriend took civics today, shes in highschool in Louisiana
You do know Nintendo Power is basicly an advertisement for Nintendo that you pay for don't you? Those codes come straight from Nintendo.
Steel is stronger so maybe they could use less, and not add too much weight. Of course every ounce they add will cost someone in shipping.
I wouldn't count on that too much. Alluminum preassure tanks are much larger than steel preassure tanks, but with half the weight. A steel case half the size should weigh at least twice as much as the alluminum one and yet they are making these steel cases 1 inch wider, so it soundsl ike theres more mass, not less.
Your computer turns off when the power gets disconnected? How quaint...
Theres always http://openvpn.sourceforge.net/ which has clients and servers for windows, or you could always tunnel pppd over ssh, http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/VPN-HOWTO/ for details
My point is that this will begin to change, a lot of the people who goto SLU are going to stay in Louisiana as they do the demand for tech jobs will grow, which will mean tech jobs will begin to come in due to the cheaper wages they will be able to get away with, its supply and demand. There are actually quite a few tech jobs already here, did you know that the software many banks use is written in Baton Rouge?
Right now there is a LOT of graphics designers out of work, the largest advertising agency in louisiana (lamar) closed up its graphics division and layed off quite a few people. So the eggs are there, just need the chickens.
you do know the story about SLU don't you? How some board member from ibm graduated there and now wasnt it to be some big tech school so he has begun pouring money into it so that people will be impressed when he says he went to SLU... the tech boom has begun more or less with that, try some comp sci courses at SLU.
Meaning my 30 year old gasoline car has a top speed higher than this, and it weighs 4000 lbs to boot. It will be some time before hybrids shake off the picture in the publics mind of a slow underpowered car.
You do realize .Net is the replacement for Pe executables for longhorn don't you? the only thing being phased out is System.Windows.Forms, and its being replaced with avalon. However System.Windows.Forms will continue to be supported for quite some time.
DotGNU's widgets come out looking and feeling like windows widgets, GTK# doesnt come with mono for windows, System.Windows.Forms comes with DotGNU. Software written for DotGNU will run under .Net, software written for Mono won't neciscarily run under .Net.
http://www.dotgnu.org/, that has portions of System.Windows.Forms implemented, as well as parts of the 2.0 api implemented. Best of all it runs on Linux, Windows, OSX, BeOS and several handheld computers from what i understand. While its not a full implentation of the api, it will be eventually.
This is great for people who buy a whitebox 2nd computer, but might actually care about not pirating MS Office
Just a note, ShopNBC sells computers with OpenOffice pre-installed.
Yes and when the four-stroke otto cycle engine is patented then the four-stroke miller cycle engine is invented to get around it, and when carbueration is patented, fuel injection is invented to get around it, and when cast iron manifolds are patented, tubuler steel headers are invented to get around it. All of these systems are superior to the systems they replace, yet we only use one out of those 3 in most cars.
Oops, forgot to post some more information.m l
According to http://www.mono-project.com/about/mono-roadmap.ht
Other components like Windows.Forms, Directory.Services, Enterprise Services and JScript are being developed but are not as mature as the other components but are under development by various people.
Both of these quotes appear to be out of context, i'm not even sure where the first one comes from and the second one is in respect to running VisualStudio.NET programs under the current version of mono.
And for what reason cant it be a full cross-platform implementation. the only parts they intend to leave out are things in the Microsoft.* namespace. and a lot of those they are implementing in the Mono.* namespace. when mono 2.0 is finished, you should be able to run anything not depending on something in the Microsoft.* namespace.
And how old is mono? mono is just starting up, their goal isnt even to get api compatibility untill 2.0. and people are running mono in production environments with xsp already.
Normally you start building the coffin before the person is actually put in it.
Except for the fact that .Net code already runs on other platforms see http://www.go-mono.com/ and http://www.dotgnu.org/.
I developed a .Net application without cross platform in mind at all, and immediately it ran under DotGNU's Portable.NET. and microsoft has expressed an interest in alternative implementations of .NET. according to the Mono faq at http://www.mono-project.com/about/faq.html#msft
Question 38: Is Microsoft helping Novell with this project?
There is no high level communication between Novell and Microsoft at this point, but engineers who work on
Microsoft is interested in other implementations of
Have you used .Net? it is actually quite decent, and if you really need libraries it is possible to make calls to windows dlls. Perhaps you should give it a try, its not just a Java clone. When it matures a bit it will be an excellent way to achieve cross platform applications.
My only complaint so far about sharpdevelop is that its a bit slow starting up, however ngen seems to speed it up a bit. My understanding of VS.NET is that it does some extra trickery wherein the executables it produces actually contain x86 code and for the most part just use the .Net api instead of using the vm. This would explain why VS.NET is so much faster than #Develop.
Because grandma won't be trying, the only problem with their instructions is that you're expecting something to happen as soon as you click the link. Thats not what happens, it happens later when you've browsed a bit and click a popup.