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  • Thuzi, Outback and Azure: Tapping the Power of Facebook and the Cloud

    So you've decided to leverage social media with an application you hope will go viral. Are you prepared to log signups at a rate of 20 per minute, 1,200 per hour and 670,000 in five weeks? Can you handle 50,000 signups in one day? Here's how the Outback Steakhouse restaurant chain, in cahoots with Florida ISV Thuzi and Windows Azure, turned a free appetizer offer into a Bloomin' success--and how others are following suit.

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  • Visual Studio 2012 and Team Foundation Server 2012 moving to continuous delivery!

    - by krislankford
    For those of you who like the new features of Visual Studio and Team Foundation Server 2012, you will need to get ready for continuous delivery. Microsoft is ramping up to start delivering a CTP for the mentioned products every 3 weeks and having those roll up to quarterly updates. That is going to be an amazing change! You can find the list of the first CTP’s at Charles Sterling’s Blog located here.

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  • Laptops sit idle...

    <b>Blog of Helios:</b> "Over the past few weeks, we've received a number of quality laptops to give out to our kids. Unfortunately many of these laptops did not come with power adapters and pretty much qualify for doorstops."

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  • SQL Rally Voting Open

    - by AllenMWhite
    The voting for sessions for SQL Rally has been going on for a couple of weeks now. This week the Enterprise Database Administration & Deployment sessions are up for voting. I didn't go into politics because I don't feel comfortable telling people that they should vote for me but this is how the sessions are being decided for this conference, so here goes. I've submitted two abstracts, both grouped in the Summit Spotlight section. The first is a new session based on what I learned implementing...(read more)

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  • Parallel Computing Features Tour in VS2010

    Just realized that I have not linked from here to a screencast I recorded a couple weeks ago that shows the API, parallel debugger and concurrency visualizer in VS2010. Take a few minutes to watch the VS2010 Parallel Computing Features Tour. Comments about this post welcome at the original blog.

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  • How do I fix the configuration for monitors?

    - by user1409190
    I'm new to Ubuntu and I've been using it for about 2 weeks now and I have the following problem: I installed the NVidia driver version 331.38. Then I restarted the computer and after I logged-in a dialog popped up with the following error message: Could not apply the stored configuration for monitors - Error on line 1 char 1 : Document must begin will an element (e.g <book>) Any suggestions on how to proceed?

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  • If you had to teach professional development to students that just graduated school, what would be the topics?

    - by user2567
    The idea is to give them more chances to be efficient in a professional environment. Most students are good with theory, most of them are smart, but they have to learn how to solve common technical problems. They will be better programmers as they practice, but maybe we can help them with some introduction training. Which topics you would select for a two weeks full time training? It's an open question, I don't want to suggest things that will reduce the answers to a particular field.

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  • SEO and Small Conventional Businesses

    I talked with a small business owner a few weeks ago that is doing his own SEO. It consists of AdWords only because that is all he has been taught. It is costing him about 12% of his profit to keep the campaign running and he has not really seen any increase in traffic that he can identify.

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  • Preparing Your Website For a Pre-Launch

    Have you ever launched your own website before and received no traffic or any visitors to it in the first few weeks? I know I have, and it was disappointing. I want to share with you some simple steps to avoid the same mistakes I made when I first started. Also these steps are not hard to implement and does require a bit of effort on your part. I know once you have tried these proven methods you will never launch a website without this.

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  • How to properly document functionality in an agile project?

    - by RoboShop
    So recently, we've just finished the first phase of our project. We used agile with fortnightly sprints. And whilst the application turned out well, we're now turning our eyes on some of the maintenance tasks. One maintenance task is that all of our documentation appears in the form of specs. These specs describe 1 or more stories and generally are a body of work which a few devs could knock over in a week. For development, that works really well - every two weeks, the devs get handed a spec and it's a nice discrete chunk of work that they can just do. From a documentation point of view, this has become a mess. The problem with writing specs that are focused on delivering just-in-time requirements to developers is we haven't placed much emphasis on the big picture. Specs come from all different angles - it could be describing a standard function, it could describing parts of a workflow, it could be describing a particular screen... And now, we have business rules about our application scattered across 120 documents. Looking for any document for a particular business rule or function in particular is quite hard because you don't know which document has this information, and making a change request is equally hard because once again, we are unsure about which spec to make the change. So we have maybe a couple of weeks of lull before it's back to specing out functionality for the next phase but in this time, I'd like to re-visit our processes. I think the way we have worked so far in terms of delivering fortnightly specs works well. But we also need a way to manage our documentation so that our business rules for a given function / workflow are easy to locate / change. I have two ideas. One is we compile all of our specs into a series of master specs broken by a few broad functional areas. The specs describe the sprint, the master spec describe the system. The only problem I can see is 1) Our existing 120 specs are not all neatly defined into broad functional areas. Some will require breaking up, merging etc. which will take a lot of time. 2) We'll be writing specs and updating master specs in each new sprint. Seems like double the work, and then do the devs look at the spec or the master spec? My other suggestion is to concede that our documentation is too big of a mess, and manage that mess going forward. So we go through each spec, assign like keywords to it, and then when we want to search for a function, we search for that keyword. Problems I can see 1) Still the problem of business rules scattered everywhere, keywords just make it easier to find it. anyway, if anyone has any decent ideas or any experience to share about how best to manage documentation, would really appreciate it.

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  • I need a very rapid game engine with as many presets as possible [closed]

    - by GLycan
    I have to make a game about the immune system (with as many grotesque simplifications as I want) in roughly two weeks. I'm thinking of something along the lines of bubble tanks, but I think I can roll with pretty much anything that fits the following: Working engine that handles mouvement, objects The fighting system can be done in any way that allows a bare minimum of configuration Scripting should be, preferably, Python Art should be customizable I'm hoping that there is some existing game that I could adapt. Any sggestions (aside from not leaving projects until later) ?

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  • 7 Ways to Get Ranked in Google Within 24 Hours

    In order for a website to receive more targeted visits, it needs to get indexed by major search engines like Google. But if you don't know the right strategy, it can take weeks before search engine spiders crawl into your pages. Listed below are proven techniques on how you can get indexed in less than 24 hours.

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  • Choosing Your Keywords - The Dos and Don'ts

    New websites are created, submitted to a few search engines and then people expect to receive millions of visitors. When only a few people visit the site over the next couple of weeks new website owners will either give-up or do some research about SEO and SEM.

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  • How to Get Your Site Indexed Quickly

    Most of the SEO experts advise to buy an existing domain or website. There are lots of age benefits of these old websites. However, buying an existing domain is not always an option. Many times you have to start afresh with a new domain. If you don't know about site indexing, Google may take weeks to index your website.

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  • Cant boot ubuntu 12.10 from LiveCD

    - by user106316
    I had ubuntu installed for a few weeks now untill it had a kernel update and i canceled the wifi driver because it didnt worked, since then i wasent able to boot into ubuntu. I tryed to boot from livecd but it didnt worked either. I was able to succssecfuly install windows 7 64 bit now and also format my hard drive but i dont like windows and when i tryed to install ubunru again to still didnt worked. Please help me! Thanks :)

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  • SEO Companies Selling a Range of Products

    By launching your web browser and having a glance at the websites and homepages of the leading SEO companies over the net, you would find a lot of packages as well as custom products which have been prepared for a variety of web purposes and it is essential to know what packages are to be chosen and purchased which would lead to some successful and great online results. As an example, when your site is relatively new and you have just registered a domain name a couple of weeks ago, buying some link building bundles could be recommended since...

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  • Top 5 Places to Get Ideas For the Best Keywords For Your Website

    Keyword research plays an important part when it comes to getting your website to rank well in the search engines. Just imagine how disappointed you will be after you've spend weeks and even months to optimize your website for keywords that you think are good just to find out there's other keywords that will get you two or three times the traffic. Here's a list that will help you identify the right keywords for your site.

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  • Choosing Your Keywords - The Dos and Don'ts

    New websites are created, submitted to a few search engines and then people expect to receive millions of visitors. When only a few people visit the site over the next couple of weeks new website owners will either give-up or do some research about SEO and SEM.

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  • What to Do When Bad SEO Comes Looking For You

    When looking at hiring Chicago SEO companies, it is extremely necessary that the hiring person is hiring a good reputable company who understands the reconstructing or redesigning your website is not just a matter of doing a hack job and sending hose page rankings soaring for a few glorious weeks. It's a matter of management of search marketing and optimization.

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  • Spotlight on Linux: PCLinuxOS 2010

    <b>Linux Journal:</b> "The long anticipated release of PCLinuxOS 2010 finally arrived a few weeks ago and reviews have been overwhelmingly positive. Even with the new crew and new features, it's still very much PCLOS."

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