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| The Latest from Derek Hatchard blogs on | MORE | | Solution to Dell Freezing After Resume from Sleep Related articles via Zemanta. I have been thoroughly satisfied with my Dell Latitude E6400 except for one large annoyance: it regularly hangs when resuming from sleep mode. It isn’t completely frozen when this happens – some applications will respond to mouse clicks but my web browser , IM , and Skype windows become unresponsive. Eventually things come back to normal but the wait is embarrassing if you’re sitting beside a Mac user. Fortunately I think I have found a solution. This week I was finally fed up with the long hangs and did some troubleshooting. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Thursday, August 6, 2009 Pay Attention: The World is Changing Based on web usage data (see Writing for the Internet Generation ), I must assume that most of you will not read this entire article. A digital native is a person for whom digital technologies already existed when they were born, and hence has grown up with digital technology such as computers, the Internet, mobile phones and MP3s. link]. The world is changing and you need to pay attention to an important trend: digital natives are not very good at paying attention. web surfing). In fact, you are likely to only read 20-40% of it. You might be struck by the urge to check your email. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Wednesday, June 10, 2009 Writing for the Internet Generation recommend you read it after this article. The implication is that for each 100 words I add to this article, readers on average will read a smaller percentage of the content (up to 1250 words, after which point the data becomes erratic according to Nielson). —– Jakob Nielson’s article: [link]. You won’t read most of what I write in this post. You will most likely skim it and at best read half of the content (on average). In May 2008, usability guru Jakob Nielson published his analysis of web usage data borrowed from a research study. seconds. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Tuesday, June 9, 2009 | | The Best from Derek Hatchard blogs on | MORE | | Pay Attention: The World is Changing Based on web usage data (see Writing for the Internet Generation ), I must assume that most of you will not read this entire article. A digital native is a person for whom digital technologies already existed when they were born, and hence has grown up with digital technology such as computers, the Internet, mobile phones and MP3s. link]. The world is changing and you need to pay attention to an important trend: digital natives are not very good at paying attention. web surfing). In fact, you are likely to only read 20-40% of it. You might be struck by the urge to check your email. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Wednesday, June 10, 2009 Solution to Dell Freezing After Resume from Sleep Related articles via Zemanta. I have been thoroughly satisfied with my Dell Latitude E6400 except for one large annoyance: it regularly hangs when resuming from sleep mode. It isn’t completely frozen when this happens – some applications will respond to mouse clicks but my web browser , IM , and Skype windows become unresponsive. Eventually things come back to normal but the wait is embarrassing if you’re sitting beside a Mac user. Fortunately I think I have found a solution. This week I was finally fed up with the long hangs and did some troubleshooting. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Thursday, August 6, 2009 Writing for the Internet Generation recommend you read it after this article. The implication is that for each 100 words I add to this article, readers on average will read a smaller percentage of the content (up to 1250 words, after which point the data becomes erratic according to Nielson). —– Jakob Nielson’s article: [link]. You won’t read most of what I write in this post. You will most likely skim it and at best read half of the content (on average). In May 2008, usability guru Jakob Nielson published his analysis of web usage data borrowed from a research study. seconds. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Tuesday, June 9, 2009 | %>
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| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | Optimistic concurrency in MongoDB using.NET and C# 'This article demonstrates a technique and supporting library for adding optimistic concurrency control to NoSQL databases and MongoDB in particular. At the end of this article is a simple C# class (data context) which has save and delete methods which internally are safe via optimistic concurrency control. Quickly, what is optimistic concurrency control? Ideally, all databases that allow concurrent access or disconnected access need to implement some form of concurrency control. This usually comes in two flavors: Pessimistic concurrency control. Optimistic concurrency control. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Monday, April 8, 2013 People or the system? An article in the MIT Sloan Management Review a few years back suggested that when “star players” move to a new team they don’t necessarily, or even normally, keep their “star player” performance. “the two view-points are always tenable. The one, how can you improve human nature until you have changed the system? The other, what is the use of changing the system before you have improved human nature?” George Orwell, “Charles Dickens” essay in Shooting and Elephant and Other Essays, Penguin Books I am sure I am not alone in exhibiting another of Orwellian trait: Double think. Allan Kelly's Blog - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 Links! - 2 conferences, 1 week This presentation was based on an article I wrote for InfoQ last year My 10 things for making your Agile adoption successful. I’ve been to two conferences this week! The first was Agile Dev Practices in Potsdam, outside of Berlin. At I presented my Retrospective Dialogue Sheets (www.dialoguesheets.com) , well I say presented, it was 10 minutes of introduction, 60 minutes of attendees doing Dialogue Sheets and 20 minutes wrap up. Anyone who has attended one of my Dialogue Sheet sessions will recognise the format. Which also means there aren’t a lot of slides for download. Allan Kelly's Blog - Friday, March 8, 2013 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - MongoDB vs. SQL Server 2008 Performance Showdown
This article is a follow up one I wrote last week entitled “The NoSQL Movement, LINQ, and MongoDB – Oh My!”. In that article I introduced the NoSQL movement, MongoDB, and showed you how to program against it in.NET … Continue reading → NoSQL Articles Visual Studio Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Thursday, April 29, 2010 - Article: 10 Features in.NET 4.0 that made Me Smile
I recently wrote another article for DevelopMentor 's Developments newsletter (not subscribed yet? Speaking of that XAML stuff, if you write WPF or Silverlight code and don’t know MVVM, stop reading this article and tp://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd419663.aspx" target="_blank">learn about it here. Also have a look at my article from last month Six Things That’ll Surprise You About.NET 4.0. Tags: Articles DevelopMentor see top-right of this page ). This one is entitled. 10 Features in.NET 4.0 that made Me Smile. Cheers, Michael. 10 Features in.NET 4.0 Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Wednesday, December 16, 2009 - Building Windows Machines in Amazon EC2
In this article I'm going to give you a simple, step-by-step overview of how to create a Windows 2008 server image in Amazon's Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) infrastructure. Tags: Articles Tools Now I must admit I'd rather have found a good tutorial on The Internets or even in a book. Feel free to send me any I missed. My experience is they are either dated or about Linux and so on. First, briefly why does one care about EC2? That's a great reason and Microsoft and Google have interesting plays there too. Personally I just want a simpler way to create virtual machines. Here we go. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Saturday, January 30, 2010 - MongoDB vs. SQL Server 2008 Performance Showdown
This article is a follow up one I wrote last week entitled “The NoSQL Movement, LINQ, and MongoDB - Oh My!”. In that article I introduced the NoSQL movement, MongoDB, and showed you how to program against it in.NET using LINQ and NoRM. For ease-of-use, you’ll have to want to read the original article. This article is about the performance argument for MongoDB over SQL Server (or MySql or Oracle). In the first article, I threw out a potentially controversial graph showing MongoDB performing 100 *times* better than SQL Server for inserts. Those were. Your Turn. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Thursday, April 29, 2010 - Article: Azure Storage
I recently wrote an article for DevelopMentor's Developments newsletter entitled Azure Storage. Listen to this article as a podcast: Azure-Storage-Article-Kennedy.mp3 ]. In this article, we will cover just the basics of the three storage services of Windows Azure. Read it at the DevelopMentor website here: [link]. I've republished here for my readers. Enjoy! Developments: Azure Storage. by Michael Kennedy. October 27th 2008, Los Angeles CA - It's 9 AM and Microsoft is hosting PDC (their most forward looking developer conference). Enter Azure Storage. Listing 3. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Wednesday, April 8, 2009 %>
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