Use Veritas to back up all of your data (databases etc.) to tapes. Back up the OSs/applications using sysprep. Sysprep is quite useful for transferring a server to different hardware. Ghost is what I use to copy my sysprep images.
I think the Architect was lying. He is scared as hell of "The One" but he knows he can mess with his head. The screens were just mimicking him and changing what he said to give the impression that it has happened before, but it has not. Neo obviously would try to save Trinity so as Neo was given the option of 2 doors, the sentinels were already in the process of destroying Zion. Neo IS the one.
Karma means fuck all to me, I appreciate having the info available on a non slashdotted server. When karma helps you losers move out of your mom's basement and gets you laid. Let me know.
A Conversation With San Mehat
posted by eekim
on Thursday May 29, 2003 - [ 08:00 AM GMT ]
Section: Web Services : Feature
Topic: Web Services
San Mehat has a long history with Linux. As a senior engineer at Corel, Mehat designed the BIOS and firmware for its Netwinder network computer, and pushed the company to adopt Linux as its operating system. Following his stint at Corel, Mehat joined VA Linux (now VA Software), and worked on the Linux kernel. Mehat recently shifted his focus to Microsoft's.NET platform, as he develops Web Services for the upcoming release of Sourceforge Enterprise Edition. Mehat shared his experiences with Web Services and.NET with Web Services DevChannel Guide Eugene Eric Kim.
DevChannel: What are you working on right now?
San Mehat: I am adding Web Services adaptors to Sourceforge Enterprise Edition (SFEE). These adaptors interface with the application server components of SFEE, creating a SOAP Web Services interface that will allow a Web Services client to consume all of the services of Sourceforge Enterprise Edition. That's step one.
Step two is writing some.NET client code to consume those Web Services -- a whole Sourceforge Enterprise Edition.NET client, whether it's pieces of a native client or adapters to other Microsoft applications like Excel, Project, Visual Studio.NET, or Outlook..NET works very very well with DCOM and COM. It doesn't put you in a sandbox, so you can effectively go and do whatever you need to do. You can do some interesting plug-in design and cross-platform development. It's really kind of neat.
DC: How did you get involved with Web Services and.NET?
SM: After VA got out of the Linux business, I went on a sabbatical for a while, visiting friends and family. At the same time, I was watching Microsoft start its.NET initiative. These patches were coming down to my Windows XP installation, and, I was thinking, "What the hell is all this? Why am I downloading this 22 MB patch? What is this.NET framework thing?"
As I started following.NET, I thought, if they can pull it off on the Microsoft platform, that's a huge coup over the technology they had been using before -- COM, DCOM. At the same time, if they can actually get enough industry adoption over this thing -- they appeared to be pretty open about the standards -- if they could get over the psychological hump in people's minds that this was a Microsoft technology, therefore they didn't want to use it, Microsoft would be very successful. Or at least, the industry would be able to pick.NET up and run with it, very much the way that people did with Java.
DC: What is an example of a Web Service that you've exposed in SFEE?
SM: I've got a Web Service that allows you to connect to SFEE, authenticate, and get a list of projects that you're a member of. You can query for a list of bugs, get them back, and then request to drill down deeper than that. In terms of Enterprise Edition integration, this could be applied to a standalone application. You would run it, rather than using a web browser, and would get the Sourceforge interface. Or, you could integrate it with something like Outlook, so in your Outlook Today box, you get this Sourceforge Today thing. You click on it, you see all your bugs, you see what's going on, you see any changes that have been made to your projects, that kind of stuff. It would look exactly like Outlook.
DC: What are some of the challenges you've faced in developing these Web Services?
SM: In.NET, there are two main ways of doing remote procedure calls. One is called.NET Remoting, where you make a connection and you send.NET metadata over the wire. It's very tightly bound. It's similar to Java RMI. Then there's SOAP.
When this new-fangled computer architecture does come out, I bet it there will be a way to transfer all of your videos to the new system and convert all of the files to the newest format(TCP/IP, I'm looking in your direction). Or maybe you will convert the files to the newest format and then transfer them over.
If you use a battery to make a device vibrate, then harness that vibration to charge the battery, you will lose some charge. You won't lose as much as if you didn't have anything recharging the battery, but you will still lose power everytime. Otherwise, you would have a perpetual motion machine.
In The Austin Powers movies (I & II), you can see the actors watching monitors in the naked scenes. Especially the scene with Myers & Hurley after they got married. They had to do that to keep the props lined up properly with the camera. Watch it, you will see.
Just a little nugget of info but I am pretty sure that traditionaly April fools day ends at noon on April 1st. At least in England, but I am Canadian, so maybe I don't really have a point. d'oh
I can sum it up for you in two words: NOT GOOD. It doesn't play DVDs properly, and they need to add new hardware to it to fix that problem. So much for a media PC.
SCO is writing up the press release right now. They will be suing by Friday.
Use Veritas to back up all of your data (databases etc.) to tapes. Back up the OSs/applications using sysprep. Sysprep is quite useful for transferring a server to different hardware. Ghost is what I use to copy my sysprep images.
I think the Architect was lying. He is scared as hell of "The One" but he knows he can mess with his head. The screens were just mimicking him and changing what he said to give the impression that it has happened before, but it has not. Neo obviously would try to save Trinity so as Neo was given the option of 2 doors, the sentinels were already in the process of destroying Zion. Neo IS the one.
Karma means fuck all to me, I appreciate having the info available on a non slashdotted server. When karma helps you losers move out of your mom's basement and gets you laid. Let me know.
A Conversation With San Mehat posted by eekim on Thursday May 29, 2003 - [ 08:00 AM GMT ] Section: Web Services : Feature Topic: Web Services
.NET platform, as he develops Web Services for the upcoming release of Sourceforge Enterprise Edition. Mehat shared his experiences with Web Services and .NET with Web Services DevChannel Guide Eugene Eric Kim.
.NET client code to consume those Web Services -- a whole Sourceforge Enterprise Edition .NET client, whether it's pieces of a native client or adapters to other Microsoft applications like Excel, Project, Visual Studio .NET, or Outlook. .NET works very very well with DCOM and COM. It doesn't put you in a sandbox, so you can effectively go and do whatever you need to do. You can do some interesting plug-in design and cross-platform development. It's really kind of neat.
.NET? .NET initiative. These patches were coming down to my Windows XP installation, and, I was thinking, "What the hell is all this? Why am I downloading this 22 MB patch? What is this .NET framework thing?"
.NET, I thought, if they can pull it off on the Microsoft platform, that's a huge coup over the technology they had been using before -- COM, DCOM. At the same time, if they can actually get enough industry adoption over this thing -- they appeared to be pretty open about the standards -- if they could get over the psychological hump in people's minds that this was a Microsoft technology, therefore they didn't want to use it, Microsoft would be very successful. Or at least, the industry would be able to pick .NET up and run with it, very much the way that people did with Java.
.NET, there are two main ways of doing remote procedure calls. One is called .NET Remoting, where you make a connection and you send .NET metadata over the wire. It's very tightly bound. It's similar to Java RMI. Then there's SOAP.
San Mehat has a long history with Linux. As a senior engineer at Corel, Mehat designed the BIOS and firmware for its Netwinder network computer, and pushed the company to adopt Linux as its operating system. Following his stint at Corel, Mehat joined VA Linux (now VA Software), and worked on the Linux kernel. Mehat recently shifted his focus to Microsoft's
DevChannel: What are you working on right now?
San Mehat: I am adding Web Services adaptors to Sourceforge Enterprise Edition (SFEE). These adaptors interface with the application server components of SFEE, creating a SOAP Web Services interface that will allow a Web Services client to consume all of the services of Sourceforge Enterprise Edition. That's step one.
Step two is writing some
DC: How did you get involved with Web Services and
SM: After VA got out of the Linux business, I went on a sabbatical for a while, visiting friends and family. At the same time, I was watching Microsoft start its
As I started following
DC: What is an example of a Web Service that you've exposed in SFEE?
SM: I've got a Web Service that allows you to connect to SFEE, authenticate, and get a list of projects that you're a member of. You can query for a list of bugs, get them back, and then request to drill down deeper than that. In terms of Enterprise Edition integration, this could be applied to a standalone application. You would run it, rather than using a web browser, and would get the Sourceforge interface. Or, you could integrate it with something like Outlook, so in your Outlook Today box, you get this Sourceforge Today thing. You click on it, you see all your bugs, you see what's going on, you see any changes that have been made to your projects, that kind of stuff. It would look exactly like Outlook.
DC: What are some of the challenges you've faced in developing these Web Services?
SM: In
SOAP allows you to do
FOR ME TO POOP ON
When this new-fangled computer architecture does come out, I bet it there will be a way to transfer all of your videos to the new system and convert all of the files to the newest format(TCP/IP, I'm looking in your direction). Or maybe you will convert the files to the newest format and then transfer them over.
South Korea.NET
Does have a nice ring to it.
I thought there was some legal issue w.r.t. WiFi in France -- that the 2.4ghz spectrum area was reserved by the French military?
That means 2.4ghz is empty.
If you use a battery to make a device vibrate, then harness that vibration to charge the battery, you will lose some charge. You won't lose as much as if you didn't have anything recharging the battery, but you will still lose power everytime. Otherwise, you would have a perpetual motion machine.
In The Austin Powers movies (I & II), you can see the actors watching monitors in the naked scenes. Especially the scene with Myers & Hurley after they got married. They had to do that to keep the props lined up properly with the camera. Watch it, you will see.
Your post reminds me of that Hello Future Girlfriend site. Hee Hee Hee. Hooooo.
XBox actually runs A modified Windows 2000 kernal.
Just a little nugget of info but I am pretty sure that traditionaly April fools day ends at noon on April 1st. At least in England, but I am Canadian, so maybe I don't really have a point. d'oh
I can sum it up for you in two words: NOT GOOD. It doesn't play DVDs properly, and they need to add new hardware to it to fix that problem. So much for a media PC.
GPS on a device that doesn't move is pretty useless IMO
Godzilla shoots lasers out of his eyes. King Kong has nothing on that.
Some jokes taste better the second time ;)
Lisa: You killed zombie Flanders!
Homer: He was a zombie?
I still have arguments with people that try to tell me the 5.25 is the floppy and the 3.5 is a hard disk.
I loved the way it sent around cookies from job search websites. A couple of employess were fired because of that.