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  • Present SEO Services Scenario

    With the advancement of the internet, e-commerce is at its zenith. The benefits of e-commerce are vast with facilities ranging from advertising for your products and services to bagging business deals from around the world. Creating a website is the beat technique to use in order to equip your business with the internet as well as other modern technology. This website will contain information about your company and products and services of the company which helps in the promoting and marketing process.

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  • Focus On Systems Admins and Developers

    - by rickramsey
    Even if you're not going to Oracle Open World, you might find it interesting to hear what the different technology groups at Oracle are going to be talking about. And if you are going, here's your Systems schedule: Note: all links go to PDF files. Focus On: Oracle Linux Focus On: Oracle Solaris Focus On: Oracle Solaris Cluster Focus On: Oracle Solaris Studio Focus On: Desktop Virtualization Focus On: Oracle VM Server Virtualization Focus On: SPARC Servers Focus On: Storage Focus On: SPARC Supercluster - Rick Website Newsletter Facebook Twitter

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  • How to keep a data structure synchronized over a network?

    - by David Gouveia
    Context In the game I'm working on (a sort of a point and click graphic adventure), pretty much everything that happens in the game world is controlled by an action manager that is structured a bit like: So for instance if the result of examining an object should make the character say hello, walk a bit and then sit down, I simply spawn the following code: var actionGroup = actionManager.CreateGroup(); actionGroup.Add(new TalkAction("Guybrush", "Hello there!"); actionGroup.Add(new WalkAction("Guybrush", new Vector2(300, 300)); actionGroup.Add(new SetAnimationAction("Guybrush", "Sit")); This creates a new action group (an entire line in the image above) and adds it to the manager. All of the groups are executed in parallel, but actions within each group are chained together so that the second one only starts after the first one finishes. When the last action in a group finishes, the group is destroyed. Problem Now I need to replicate this information across a network, so that in a multiplayer session, all players see the same thing. Serializing the individual actions is not the problem. But I'm an absolute beginner when it comes to networking and I have a few questions. I think for the sake of simplicity in this discussion we can abstract the action manager component to being simply: var actionManager = new List<List<string>>(); How should I proceed to keep the contents of the above data structure syncronized between all players? Besides the core question, I'm also having a few other concerns related to it (i.e. all possible implications of the same problem above): If I use a server/client architecture (with one of the players acting as both a server and a client), and one of the clients has spawned a group of actions, should he add them directly to the manager, or only send a request to the server, which in turn will order every client to add that group? What about packet losses and the like? The game is deterministic, but I'm thinking that any discrepancy in the sequence of actions executed in a client could lead to inconsistent states of the world. How do I safeguard against that sort of problem? What if I add too many actions at once, won't that cause problems for the connection? Any way to alleviate that?

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  • Why Webmasters Should Master SEO

    If you want to be a competitor in the internet marketing and business world, you need to arm yourself with the knowledge and tools that are proven to make people successful as internet entrepreneurs. One of the biggest factors to online business success, one that you can benefit from learning, is search engine optimization.

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  • Unix tools in business use: are they helpful?

    - by Prometheus
    Do you think knowing Unix tools like sed, awk, LaTeX, Perl give you a great edge in the business world? (e.g. being a manager) From my short reflection, the only profession that needs those sort of (plain text) tools is programming. Because even when I do creative writing, I rarely ever need it. I mean, do CEOs and executives of large corporations ever learn this kind of stuff if they were not CS major to begin with?

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  • White Label SEO Service - Making Money Online

    The online world is gaining popularity day by day. Almost everything is possible sitting at home just at a click of a mouse. As a matter of fact, there are several methods or programs especially the ones involving selling SEO that have come up lately, which can help you make some good money online.

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  • Search Engine Optimization Services - Offering Cost-Effective Marketing Strategy!

    It's the increasing popularity for the Internet that is exactly propelling more and more businessmen to announce their website in order to draw customers around the world. These days, the Internet has been considered as the most effective marketing and product promotion platform that can take business for new heights. If you are all set to get some international clients, then its time to opt for the SEO services.

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  • Chinese Search Engine Optimization - Start Today For Better Results

    If you are following the internet trends, you'll see that the Chinese population getting on the web is ever increasing and the most populated country in the world is making a huge impact online. Chinese search engine optimization is a great way to reach out to an audience in China however it differs in some ways from the traditional SEO practices.

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  • C Minishell Command Expansion Printing Gibberish

    - by Optimus_Pwn
    I'm writing a unix minishell in C, and am at the point where I'm adding command expansion. What I mean by this is that I can nest commands in other commands, for example: $> echo hello $(echo world! ... $(echo and stuff)) hello world! ... and stuff I think I have it working mostly, however it isn't marking the end of the expanded string correctly, for example if I do: $> echo a $(echo b $(echo c)) a b c $> echo d $(echo e) d e c See it prints the c, even though I didn't ask it to. Here is my code: msh.c - http://pastebin.com/sd6DZYwB expand.c - http://pastebin.com/uLqvFGPw I have a more code, but there's a lot of it, and these are the parts that I'm having trouble with at the moment. I'll try to tell you the basic way I'm doing this. Main is in msh.c, here it gets a line of input from either the commandline or a shellfile, and then calls processline (char *line, int outFD, int waitFlag), where line is the line we just got, outFD is the file descriptor of the output file, and waitFlag tells us whether or not we should wait if we fork. When we call this from main we do it like this: processline (buffer, 1, 1); In processline, we allocate a new line: char expanded_line[EXPANDEDLEN]; We then call expand, in expand.c: expand(line, expanded_line, EXPANDEDLEN); In expand, we copy the characters literally from line to expanded_line until we find a $(, which then calls: static int expCmdOutput(char *orig, char *new, int *oldl_ind, int *newl_ind) orig is line, and new is expanded line. oldl_ind and newl_ind are the current positions in the line and expanded line, respectively. Then we pipe, and recursively call processline, passing it the nested command(for example, if we had "echo a $(echo b)", we would pass processline "echo b"). This is where I get confused, each time expand is called, is it allocating a new chunk of memory EXPANDEDLEN long? If so, this is bad because I'll run out of stack room really quickly(in the case of a hugely nested commandline input). In expand I insert a null character at the end of the expanded string, so why is it printing past it? If you guys need any more code, or explanations, just ask. Secondly, I put the code in pastebin because there's a ton of it, and in my experience people don't like it when I fill up several pages with code. Thanks.

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  • Why Keep These 10 A Penny " How Long Will It Take To Program in Blah Blah Blah Language Questions" Open Yet Close This Question..? [migrated]

    - by user866190
    Why keep this question open and others like it open which basically asks how long does it take to learn a programming language? Yet I ask a valid question which basically asks how esteemed is a mathematics degree from the UK open university and would software employers hire whilst you are the course.. and it gets closed I love the advice I get from this site and I appreciate the fact that Software Technicians of all types use this site, but it's a bit shallow if you can't ask a question with a little bit of the real world involved

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  • New Podcast Available - Fusion DOO for Multi-Channel Retail

    - by Pam Petropoulos
    Oracle Fusion Distributed Order Orchestration can help retailers standardize their order and fulfillment processes across all channels.  Listen to the latest podcast entitled “Unify Sales and Fulfillment in Multi-Channel Retail with Fusion DOO” and discover how Fusion Distributed Order Orchestration can deliver value to retail customers and also hear real world examples of how customers are using it today.  Click here to listen to the podcast.

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  • Introduction to Manual Directory Submission Service

    If you own a website and if you are also familiar with search engine optimization process then you must have heard about Manual Directory Submission Service. In which you can submit your website to different online directories for search purpose of your website. In this way customers can reach you easily from all over the world.

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  • Patent Pool to Thwart Open Source Codecs

    <b>DaniWeb:</b> "Just when you thought it couldn't get any worse in the world of software patents, a reliable source sent me this response from Steve Jobs about a patent pool that's forming and aiming to nail the open source codecs projects."

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  • Connect Digest : 2011-03-12

    - by AaronBertrand
    Background Last year, I came to a very tough decision that I would cease publicizing Connect items in an attempt to drive up votes and get important issues fixed. This was almost entirely due to a couple of MVPs criticizing me for raising awareness of certain Connect items instead of letting them be found "naturally." I wasn't sure what world they were living in, where droves of everyday end users just happened to stumble upon Connect items without any prompting. I suppose it could be said that the...(read more)

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