Date: February 27th, 2005

“Robert, they can’t eat you!” My rules for survival.

27 February, 2005 (20:04) | General | No comments

Bob Parsons rules for survival. Now here is a guy with some major major experience. This is the kind of stuff that I love to reread on a frequent basis. My wife loves Dr. Phil on TV. I think he is a joke for a medical professional. More of a huckster/entertainer than anything. Bob’s […]

Enterprise Architect - Full Lifecycle UML Modeling Software

27 February, 2005 (19:31) | .NET Tools | 2 comments

Lately I’ve seen some really nice software come out of Australia. Way to go! Here is a very impressive UML modeling tool that averages about $300.00 per dev for 1-4 licenses. If you have ever tried to create a proper UML diagram in Visio you will aprreciate this tool.
Click here for link to the […]

Microsoft did something right

27 February, 2005 (12:10) | SQL Server | No comments

For the past 3 months I’ve been working on a project that uses Oracle 8i. It made me appreciate what MS has done right with SQL Server. Beginning with a free limited version of the bits that developers can use, all the way up to the Enterprise product that comes in at what […]

Click Once Deployment is really old shool

27 February, 2005 (08:34) | General | No comments

I came across Carl Franklins utility program to deploy application updates via a “click-once” metaphore. It took me back to a project I worked on about 8 years ago using Access 2.0 That project proved to me what a good programmer can do even with limited resources. We literally built a state of […]

Best Resume Ever

27 February, 2005 (08:14) | General | No comments

Guess I’m late to the party since this was originally posted by Chris Sells in November of last year (or thereabouts). Nonetheless this is terrific fun. I hope the guy got his job. I love it.
Link Here

ASP.NET 2.0 and Data-Bound Controls: A New Perspective and Some New Practices

27 February, 2005 (08:11) | Asp.Net 2.o | No comments

Dino Esposito published this on MSDN. It does contain some interesting points about the underlying structure of controls in 2.0
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