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  • How far back do you use your version control and for what reason?

    - by acidzombie24
    Typically when i work on a project i only go back a few days or the last major change when i decide to do something drastic. I sometimes notice i broke a test or a feature and overlooked it for a few weeks so i may go back a month or two and see if the feature or test is broken and trace down the week i broke it. Then find what change did it. On a long term project over the span of a year. Do you actually go back 6+ months and if so why?

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  • FREE eBook: .NET Performance Testing and Optimization (Part 1)

    In this this first part of complete guide to performance profiling, Paul Glavich and Chris Farrell explain why performance testing is a good idea and walk you through everything you need to know to set up a test environment. This comprehensive guide to getting started is an essential handbook to any programmer looking to set up a .NET testing environment and get the best results out of it. Download your free copy now span.fullpost {display:none;}

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  • IP/PORT forward requests to another server

    - by DT.DTDG
    I have the following listening PORT:IP set up on my UBuntu server. 12.345.67.890:3636 It receives requests perfectly, however, I would now like to forward any requests to that IP:PORT to another IP:PORT, i.e.: 09.876.54.321:3636 Essentially I want to do a request forward 12.345.67.890:3636 -> 09.876.54.321:3636. How can I go about it in Terminal and if I wanted to change it back how can I go about that too? Is there also a way to test that the data is forwarding and it is setup properly? Thanks! Edit: Can I just do as follows, just wondering how I would go about testing it and how I could disable it? sysctl net.ipv4.ip_forward=1 iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 3636 -j DNAT --to-destination 09.876.54.321:3636 iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -j MASQUERADE

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  • Windows Live va faire sa mue de printemps et donner une seconde jeunesse à Hotmail : G-mail en ligne

    Windows Live va faire sa mue de printemps Et donner une seconde jeunesse à Hotmail : G-mail en ligne de mire ? Microsoft est sur le point de lancer un grand toilettage de printemps de Windows Live. Baptisé Wave 4 (à ne pas confondre avec Google Wave donc), le projet concerne la messagerie instantanée (Messenger) et la boite mail de Microsoft (Hotmail). Chris Jones, vice-président de Windows Live, révèle que Redmond va « se concentrer sur l'amélioration de Hotmail pour aider toutes les personnes occupée...

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  • Google présente son dernier prototype de voiture autonome, lors de la conférence Code

    Google présente son dernier prototype de voiture autonome lors de la conférence Code Décidément la conférence Code réserve bien des surprises. Après Microsoft et son prototype de traduction de conversations Skype, c'est Google qui a dévoilé un prototype d'une voiture électrique aux formes arrondies qui sera entièrement pilotée par ordinateur. D'ailleurs, comme l'explique Chris Urmson, le directeur du projet Self-Driving Car, « le prototype n'a pas d'embrayage, pas de pédale d'accélérateur, pas...

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  • Google I/O 2010 - Make your app real-time with PubSubHubbub

    Google I/O 2010 - Make your app real-time with PubSubHubbub Google I/O 2010 - Make your application real-time with PubSubHubbub Social Web 201 Brett Slatkin This session will go over how to add support for the PubSubHubbub protocol to your website. You'll learn how to turn Atom and RSS feeds into real-time streams. We'll go over how to consume real-time data streams and how to make your website reactive to what's happening on the web right now. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 5 0 ratings Time: 55:46 More in Science & Technology

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  • Maps We Like, and Why We Like Them

    Maps We Like, and Why We Like Them Live from Sydney (now in HD!) Paul and Chris talk about their favorite maps, why we like them, and how we find cool maps. 1:40 Showcase | 5:45 Geo Developer Blog | 8:25 GTA4 Street View map | 11:00 Internet Map | 14:40 How we find cool maps | 20:30 Map of the Dead | 24:50 Old Maps Online | 27:10 Wind Map From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 3 0 ratings Time: 29:18 More in Science & Technology

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  • ISO Format

    One of the most common file types used in the distribution of software over the Internet is the .ISO format; these single files contain within them an exact copy of an entire CD or DVD disc. They are... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - April 05, 2010]

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  • “It Isn’t Easy At All; Otherwise, Everyone Would Be Doing It”

    - by Kathryn Perry
    A few months ago, JP Saunders (pictured left), who leads the go-to-market initiatives for the Oracle CX Service offering, kicked off a series of articles about modern customer service. He contends that to take care of customers?and the people that support those customers?companies need to make it easy to deliver consistently great experiences. But it’s not easy; it’s an art. The six posts in The Art of Easy series will help you better understand some of the customer service challenges you face and how to avoid common pitfalls. We pulled them all together here in one post for continuity and easy access. Saunders introduces the series with The Art of Easy: Make It Easy To Deliver Great Customer Service Experiences (Part 1). The Art of Easy: Offer Self Service With the Emphasis on Service (Part 2) by David Fulton (pictured left): David Fulton, Director of Product Management, Oracle Service Cloud, shares five tenets of customer self service that move an organization closer to becoming a modern customer service business. Easy Decisions For Complex Problems (Part 3) by Heike Lorenz (pictured right): Heike Lorenz, Director of Global Product Marketing, Policy Automation, writes about automating service policies to ensure that the correct decisions are being applied to the right people. The goal is to nurture the trusted relationships with customers during complex decision-making processes. Moving at the Speed of Easy (Part 4) by Chris Ulmand (pictured left): Chris Omland, Director of Product Management, Oracle Service Cloud, addresses the need for speed to keep up with customers’ expectations. His advice—start with a platform that enables agile innovation, respects a company’s unique needs, and has proven reliability to protect customer relationships. Knowledge Makes It Easy For Everyone (Part 5) by Nav Chakravarti (pictured rig: Vice President Nav Chakravarti, Oracle Service Cloud, talks about managing the knowledge that customers need and want. He coaches readers on delivering answers to customers’ questions easily, in context, with relevance, reliably, and accurately. Making Easy, Both Effective and Efficient (Part 6) by Melinda Uhland (pictured left): Melinda Uhland, Oracle CX Product Management teaches us that happy agents produce happy customers. A Modern Customer Service organization is one that invests in its agents and empowers them with tools to make them efficient and effective, which, in turn, improves customer results.

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  • Prolific Viruses

    Anti-Virus software gets a great deal of coverage in Click because ultimately it';s a very important component of any computer system and choosing the right program to protect your computer should be ... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - May 16, 2010]

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  • Is there a debian/ubuntu policy on softlinking things to another location in opt once they're installed?

    - by AbrahamVanHelpsing
    Is there a debian/ubuntu policy on softlinking things to another location in opt once they're installed properly in usr/share or usr/lib? Here's a simple example: Packaging up dnsenum. It's a REALLY simple package (4 files). A perl script, two wordlists, and a readme. So from what I gather: The wordlists should go in usr/share/dnsenum/* The perl script itself would go in usr/lib/dnsenum/ The readme would go in usr/share/doc/dnsenum/ Add a wrapper bash script that goes in bin and just passes arguments to dnsenum.pl. The question is this: If there are various tools that provide wordlists or some other shared resource, is there a policy on linking all the wordlists from different packages in to /opt/wordlists/ ? It seems like the "right" thing to do respecting the directory structure while still making things convenient.

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  • Windows 7 Operating system

    "It';s the big week when Windows 7 is launched on Thursday, but one statistic that grabbed my eye was in a Wikipedia article stating that there are estimated to be three times as many XP computers in ... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - April 05, 2010]

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  • box2d and constant movement

    - by Arnas
    i'm developing a game with a top down view, the players body is a circle. To move the character you need to tap on the screen and it moves to the spot. To achieve this i'm saving the coordinate of the touch and call a method every frame which applies linear velocity to the body with a vector of the direction the body should go _body->SetLinearVelocity(b2Vec2((a.x - currPos.x)/SPEED_RATIO,(size.height - a.y - currPos.y)/SPEED_RATIO)); //click position - current position, screen height - click position (since the y axis is flipped, (0,0) is in the bottom left ) - current position = vector of the direction we want to go now the problem with this is that the body slows down until it finally stops when getting closer to the point we want it to go, since the closer we are to that point the lenght of the vector gets smaller. Besides that i've read that it's bad practice to set linear velocity in box2d and i should use apply force instead, but that way the forces would add up and overshoot the target where it's supposed to stop. So what i'm asking is how to move a box2d body to a coordinate in constant speed.

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  • Read Erotica on the iPad

    Requirements: -- An iPad -- Free Stanza reader for iPad. -- Free Stanza Desktop software (Runs on Window PC and Mac). -- Internet connection and a small amount of intelligence. Steps: For a detail... [Author: Chris Smith - Computers and Internet - May 04, 2010]

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  • Like Broadband...but Faster!

    With a new brand of superfast broadband just around the corner things are about to change for the majority of the British public that are stuck with 8MBPS connections. It is undeniable that Broadban... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - May 15, 2010]

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  • How an offline main domain can influence traffic on an active sub domain

    - by danie7L T
    The website(s) design is for a company active in 3 different areas. As an example lets use the following structure: www.example.com [sub1.example.com] [sub2.example.com] [sub3.example.com] sub2.example.com and sub3.example.com are ready to go live but www.example.com really isn't and send a 503 http error code. I would like to know if this situation will affect the traffic and ranking of the subdomains ready to go live? Is it preferable to wait and go live with the main domain? Or there is nothing to "fear" and one doesn't affect the other? Thank you

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  • YouTube Loses Music Videos!

    As a regular visitor of YouTube it saddens me to hear a large proportion of music videos will not be available to watch in the UK on the site for the foreseeable future due to an ongoing dispute betw... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - May 13, 2010]

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  • Edit Your Images Online For Free With Aviary

    While looking for something to fill our Refresh Cartridges blog, we came accross this free online image editor and felt the need to create paper penguins with its help. In case you thought there was ... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - April 05, 2010]

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  • How to estimate what kind of server resources you will require at launch?

    - by Anonymous -
    How can I go about/what is the best way of estimating what kind of server resources I will require at the launch of a new project. Let's say for instance I'd gathered 10k users email addresses that opted-in to be informed when we launch. I didn't really want to go for a cloud solution at the moment. Should I just get a reasonably-specced dedicated server and go from there, or should I be looking at services like Amazon EC2? Or should I start out with EC2 for the fully-flexible resources, then once things stabilize I'll be able to sort a fixed hosting deal that is adequate elsewhere? Sub-question: What's a good way of estimating what load a particular application will place on the server per user?

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  • Image Resolution FAQ

    In today';s world it is important to understand image resolution and size, the basics are fairly easy to get to grips with but the intricacies can be incredibly complex. The article this week has been... [Author: Chris Holgate - Computers and Internet - June 15, 2010]

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