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  • Apple II Teardown and Restoration Offers a Peek at Computing History [Video]

    - by Jason Fitzpatrick
    In this extended teardown video, we’re granted a peek at the guts of an Apple IIe and treated to quite a bit of Apple IIe history in the process. Todd Harrison, via his project blog ToddFun, shares videos of his Apple IIe restoration project. The videos are lengthy, but include close up examination of all the parts and lots of information about the history of the computer and its construction. You can check out the rest of his Apple II videos and posts at the link below. Apple II Plus from 1982 teardown, repair, cleanup and demonstration [via The Unofficial Apple Weblog] HTG Explains: What Is RSS and How Can I Benefit From Using It? HTG Explains: Why You Only Have to Wipe a Disk Once to Erase It HTG Explains: Learn How Websites Are Tracking You Online

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  • Auszeichnung für Oracle beim Channel Marketing Award 2010: IT-Security Kampagne "Keine Aufregung" belegt 2. Platz

    - by A&C Redaktion
    Am 18. November wurde in Augsburg der Channel Marketing Award 2010 verliehen. Gesucht wurden die besten Kampagnen der IT-Branche, mit denen wirtschaftlich und kreativ herausragende Marketing-Aktivitäten rund um das Partner Business umgesetzt wurden. In der Kategorie With/Through Partner hat Oracle mit der IT-Security Kampagne www.keine-aufregung.de hinter Xerox den 2. Platz belegt! Damit verwies „Keine Aufregung", durchgeführt von Bozana Pistorius im Januar 2010, Kampagnen von IBM, Corel und E-Plus auf die Plätze. Bilder der Kampagnen sind hier zu finden. Die Berichterstattung zum CMA Award gibt es online bei IT-Business inklusive Video und Bildergalerie.   V.l.n.r.: Alexander Woelke (Woelke von der Brüggen), Sarah Olbrich (Woelke von der Brüggen), Bozana Pistorius (Oracle), Claudine Petit (Cloudbridge Consulting) und Werner Nieberle (Vogel IT Medien)

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  • Microsoft : « On s'est aimés, on s'est perdus de vue, on se retrouve », entretien avec le Directeur de la division Développeurs

    « On s'est aimés, on s'est perdus de vue, on se retrouve » Entretien avec le Directeur de la division Développeurs de Microsoft France Chez Microsoft, dans l'embrasure d'une porte, il se peut que vous entendiez quelques confessions à coeur ouvert sur un dénommé Vista. Des confidences qui montrent, qu'en interne, cet OS a été vécu par beaucoup comme un accident industriel qui a laissé des traces. Jean Ferré - Directeur de la division Développeurs, Plateforme et Ecosystème de Microsoft France - parle lui plus diplomatiquement d'un « désamour » né entre les développeurs et Microsoft avec Vista. Depuis, Windows 7 est passé par là pour panser les blessures. Et la Build de ...

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  • What are best practices when giving a presentation to programmers?

    - by blunders
    I've watched 50 plus presentations on programming topics, although most have been online; example, Google Tech Talks -- and have ad-hoc experience on what formats work for programmers, or practices to take into account when presenting to a group of programmers. That said, I'm open to any suggestions, but here's some topic of the top of my head: Programming Jokes, Images, etc. Posting Code for download Contact Info Collecting feedback Presenting Code on Screen If it matters, in this case -- I'm giving a presentation on using a scripting language to extract, transform and load data to a local user group who's focus is the scripting language; Ruby in this case. Questions, feedback, requests -- just comment, thanks!!

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  • Nano-SIM : Nokia s'oppose à la proposition d'Apple et ne concédera aucun de ses brevets essentiels pour son élaboration

    Nano-SIM : Nokia s'oppose à la proposition d'Apple et ne concédera aucun de ses brevets essentiels pour son élaboration Le projet qui sera utilisé comme base pour le développement de la Nano-Sim, la prochaine génération de cartes SIM encore plus petites que les Micro SIM, doit être choisi cette semaine par l'l'ETSI ( European Telecommunications Standards Institute ). Deux projets ont été déposés auprès de l'organisme de standardisation. L'un développé par Apple et soutenu par plusieurs opérateurs de télécommunication et l'autre mis au point par Nokia avec le soutien des fabricants comme Motorola et RIM. Le projet d'Apple propose une nano-SIM réduite à la taille d'une puce ...

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  • Mozilla prépare un App Store et explique qu'il faudra "aller au delà des navigateurs", réactions exclusives de Tristan Nitot à ce sujet

    Mozilla prépare un App Store et explique qu'il faudra "aller au delà des navigateurs", réactions exclusives de Tristan Nitot à ce sujet Le 9 décembre à Paris, à l'occasion de la conférence Le Web de 2010, Mitchel Baker, Présidente de la Fondation Mozilla, a expliqué que Mozilla "va lancer un système d'applications différent de celui pensé par Apple", afin de "révolutionner la navigation" et renouveler les comportements de recherche sur Internet. Des propos qui m'ont interpellée et poussée à en demander plus à Tristan Nitot, fondateur et Président de l'association Mozilla Europe depuis 2003. Tristan Nitot : En fait, Mitchell faisait référence à notre volonté d'imaginer ce que pourr...

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  • Le Cloud d'Amazon certifié pour les ERP et CRM d'Oracle, qui deviennent disponibles à la demande, sur-le-champs et avec un support

    Le Cloud d'Amazon certifié pour les ERP et CRM d'Oracle Qui deviennent disponible à la demande, sur-le-champs et avec un support d'Oracle Le service Elastic Cloud d'Amazon permet depuis hier de faire tourner PeopleSoft et JD Edward Enterprise One, les CRM (solution de gestion de relation clients) et ERP (progiciel de gestion d'entreprise) d'Oracle. Amazon EC2 permettait déjà de le faire. Mais à condition de les installer soi-même sur des machines virtuelles tournant sous Windows Server (Amazon annonce le support d'autres OS à venir). A partir d'aujourd'hui, les utilisateurs de PeopleSoft et JD Edward Enterprise One hébergés sur une instance EC2 n'auront plus à « met...

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  • YouSendIt Alternative?

    - by WuckaChucka
    Looking for a reasonably priced alternative to YouSendIt's exorbitant pricing for an embedded, unbranded (i.e. no "Uploads by SomeCompany" or at the very least, discrete, subtle co-branding) file upload solution for my client's print shop Website. To do what we want to do with YouSendIt, we're looking at a corporate account of $995 USD plus $29.99 USD monthly fee, that is only sold pro-rated, so you have to buy the entire year's worth. To me, this is just unacceptable considering the commodity pricing of storage and bandwidth nowadays. For data, we're looking at roughly 10MB per upload, with perhaps 250-1000 uploads per month, with transient data storage of no more than 30 days (and more than likely 1-2 business days) for a total of 10 GB transfer (upload) and 10 GB transfer (download, to the print shop) at the very max each month. Any ideas? Everything I've found through searching seems to be geared more towards personal file sharing and not for embedding into Websites. Thanks

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  • La première beta de Ubuntu 10.04 LTS est sortie : nouveau design, nouveau kernel, nouveaux logiciels

    La beta 1 de Ubuntu 10.04 LTS est sortie Nouveau design, nouveau kernel, nouveaux logiciels Fini le marron dans Ubuntu. Le choc est rude, certes. Mais la première beta de la mouture 10.04 de l'OS consolera les nostalgique de l'ancien design de la distribution Linux (certainement) la plus connue au monde. Bien qu'il ne s'agisse que de la première beta, Lucid Lynx propose en effet déjà plusieurs nouveautés majeures. Sous le capot, on trouve par exemple le kernel 2.6.32 de Linux, Gnome 2.30 et une prise en charge améliorée des cartes graphiques NVIDIA. Coté logiciel, Ubuntu 10.04 propose notamment OpenOffice.org 3.2.0 (la suite bureautique de Su...

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  • Sortie de première RC de PostgreSQL 9.2, annoncée par le PostgreSQL Global Development Group

    Le PostgreSQL Global Development Group a annoncé la première Release Candidate de PostgreSQL 9.2. Cette version majeure inclut des avancées considérables en termes de performances et d'évolutivité horizontale et verticale. Les utilisateurs qui veulent participer à la traque des éventuels derniers bogues sont invités à télécharger et tester cette RC1 de PostgreSQL 9.2 le plus rapidement possible. Cette RC1 contient de nombreux correctifs des versions Beta précédentes. Citons : de nombreuses mises à jour de la documentation et des traductions ; un correctif au REVOKE de privilèges en cascade ; la suppression des problèmes de boucles dans l'export par pg_dump des vues de niveau sécurité ; des correctifs apportés à ...

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  • What is the best solution for document archiving?

    - by Anders Wallenquist
    I'm looking for a utility that helps me (and my colleagues) to archive documents in a systematic manner (Like Zeitgeist but permanent). The utility have to clean-out old document from desktops and store them on a server (as automatic as possible and consistent) maybe from just a few locations (Document directory) Documents shall be stored on cheap large media for many years to come - hard disk and file system maybe? Easy to maintain and manage for a small organization. Documents have to be easy to find and restore One systematic manner could be a directory-structure by year, month, user or user, year, month. Its a plus if documents could be linked to a project, if documents could be search-able and if document could also be mail, IM-discussions not only OpenOffice traditional documents. Any ideas?

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  • Trouble switching to Dvorak on Ubuntu 12.04

    - by Dodgie
    I've decided to switch to Dvorak on my Ubuntu machine, but I'm having some trouble: First, I attempted to do this through the GUI -- System Settings - Keyboard Layout - add layout (plus sign) - English(programmer Dvorak). This didn't work at first, so I restarted my machine. It seemed to work at the password prompt (if only because QWERTY did not), but I couldn't get it to accept my password. I used the virtual keyboard option to enter my password with mouse clicks (the virtual keyboard was using the programmer's Dvorak Standard) and was able to get in that way. Once logged in, however, I was back to QWERTY. Second, I tried to switch on the command prompt -- $ loadkeys /usr/lib/kbd/keytables/dvorak.map The error message I received was "Couldn't get a file descriptor referring to the console " Does anyone know what I'm doing wrong? I've looked for a solution for these problems, but couldn't find anything.

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  • Présentation de Robot Operating System, par Jérôme Laplace

    Salut, je signale un nouvel article pour les programmeurs-roboticiens. Il s'agit d'un article d'introduction à ROS (Robot Operating System). ROS est le standard qui monte dans le monde de la robotique. Il est gratuit, open-source et robuste. Pour ceux qui souhaitent découvrir ou aller plus loin dans la robotique et après en intelligence artificielle, je pense que ça peut être une introduction utile. Cet article ne comporte pas de code, il présente les concepts. A lire donc avec de faire les tutoriaux... Présentation de Robot Operat...

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  • Bill Gates fait la promotion des MacBook sur son blog, à quand Steve Jobs déclarant "Windows 7, c'était mon idée" ?

    Bill Gates fait la promotion des MacBook sur son blog, à quand Steve Jobs déclarant "Windows 7, c'était mon idée" ? Sur son blog "The Gates Notes", Bill Gates, figure emblématique de Microsoft, a publié une image bigrement inattendue. Dans un post où l'homme expose ses pensées à propos du système scolaire américain, et se lamente d'un trop peu d'élèves diplômés, il illustre sa réflexion avec la photo de deux étudiants... dont l'un est en train de travailler sur un Mac ! Et même un MacBook, selon les plus fins observateurs. Comme si ce n'était pas suffisant, une forme noire posée sur une pochette jaune, au dessus de l'ordinateur, à tout l'air d'être un iPhone. Beau joueur, le Bill ! ...

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  • Les offres TV des firmes informatiques ont-elles leur place sur le marché ? Google repousse la sienne suite aux mauvaises critiques

    Les offres TV des firmes informatiques ont-elles leur place sur le marché ? Google repousse la sienne suite aux mauvaises critiques Mise à jour du 20.12.2010 par Katleen La fièvre des box TV semblait avoir contaminé les plus grandes firmes informatiques : d'abord Apple, puis Google et Microsoft. Mais Mountain View vient d'annoncer ses réticences à poursuivre dans cette voie. La firme, qui devait lancer ses offres télévisuelles dans quelques jours lors du "Consumer Eclectronics Show", a décidé de les repousser. Pourquoi un tel revirement ? Suite aux premières critiques des professionnels qui ont pu tester le produit en avant première. Les retours ont été plutôt négatifs, quali...

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  • QMake et au-delà : le futur de l'outil de compilation de Qt, un article de Marius traduit par Louis

    Bonjour, QMake est un outil qui simplifie grandement le processus de compilation pour de différentes plateformes. Son prédécesseur était un script Perl nommé TMake, qui, dépassé, avait vite été remplacé par le QMake que nous connaissons. Aujourd'hui, ce dernier semble à son tour ne plus apporter une réponse au besoin initial, étant devenu difficile à maintenir. Ainsi, devant la diversité et le nombre des avis internes, Marius a décidé de rédiger un article dans les Qt Labs Blogs afin de demander aux développeurs aguerris leur avis sur la question. Qu'allons-nous faire de QMake ? C'est la question, posée par Marius en début...

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  • Bad FPS for smaller size (OpenGL ES with SDL)

    - by ber4444
    If you saw my other question, well, there is still a little problem: Click here to watch on youtube Basically, the frame rate is very bad on the actual device, where for some reason the animation is scaled (it looks like the left side on the video). It is quite fast on the simulator where it is not scaled (right side). For a test, I submitted this new changeset that hard-codes the smaller size (plus increases the point size for HII regions to make the dust clouds more visible), and as you see in the video, now it is slow even in the simulator (left side shows the small size, right side shows the original size -- otherwise the code is the same). I'm clueless why it's soooo slow with a smaller galaxy, in fact it should be FASTER. As for general speed optimization (which is not strictly part of my question but is closely related to it, esp. if we need a workaround to speed things up), some initial ideas: reducing the number of items drawn may affect the appearance negatively but screen resolution could be reduced there are too many glBegin(GL_POINTS)/glEnd() blocks, we could draw more than just a single star at once

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  • Firefox is pounding my system what should I do

    - by nikhil
    I'm running the latest version of firefox 17.0.1 on ubuntu 12.10 on a Acer Aspire One 722 Netbook. It has an amd dual core C60 processor and 2GB RAM. As you can see, firefox is absolutely killing my system, it responds really slowly and opening tabs is a royal pain. I have on an average 4-5 open tabs at a given time. Is there something that I can do to make my browsing experience more zippy? Additionally I run the following addons Firebug HTTPS Everywhere Ad block plus

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  • Saving and Loading the Game (Automatically or Manually) via Internal Storage Only (Tablet PC Issues)

    - by David Dimalanta
    Here is my question. When making a game app for Android, I considered first the device. It's no problem to save progress everything (from levels to records) on a smartphone because it has an SD Card slot. Exception to this, the tablet PC, it can really nothing but on internal only storage. For example, I'm using this tutorial for audio spectrum (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cN1VzZXcdo) that involves copying from internal to external in order to detect frequency. It works on the desktop but not on the Android device (Tablets only [i.e. Google Nexus Tablet]). Is there a way to optimize save/load game problems due to internal/external device issues? Plus, additionally, what's the reason why my device won't work on tablets, except the desktop, while testing the audio spectrum code and why? Also, is it the same with saving/loading game?

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  • Graffiti is a Sinatra-inspired Groovy Framework

    - by kerry
    Playing around with Sinatra the other day and realized I could really use something like this for Groovy. Thus, Graffiti was born. It’s basically a thin wrapper around Jetty. At first, I thought I might write my own server for it (everybody needs to do that once, don’t they?), but decided to invoke the ’simplest thing that could possibly work’ principle. Here is the requisite ‘Hello World’ example: import graffiti.* @Grab('com.goodercode:graffiti:1.0-SNAPSHOT') @Get('/helloworld') def hello() { 'Hello World' } Graffiti.serve this The code, plus more documentation is hosted under my github account.

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  • Environment naming standards in software development?

    - by Marcus_33
    My project is currently suffering from environment naming issues. Different people have different assumptions as to what environments should be named or what the names designate, and it's causing confusion when discussing them. I've done a bit of research and I haven't found any standards out there. The terms include "Local", "Sand", "Dev", "Test", "User", "QA", "Staging" and "Prod" (plus a few more that different people have asked about) I'm not looking for just opinions, though if there's one out there that "everyone" has I'll take it - I'm trying to find definitions advanced by some sort of authority, even if it's unofficial. Here's the environments we currently use: Environment on the developer's PC Shared Environment where developers directly upload code to self-test Shared Environment where standards and functionality are tested by QA people Shared Environment where completed and QA-checked code is approved by project requesters Environment that mirrors the final environment as a final check and to prepare for deployment Final Environment where code is in use I know what I'd call them, but is there some sort of standard on this? Thanks in advance.

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  • L'essor des tablettes affecte les ventes de PCs, le marché a été très touché à Noël et cela pourrait continuer en 2011

    L'essor des tablettes affecte les ventes de PCs, le marché a été très touché à Noël et cela pourrait continuer en 2011 Fin 2010, le Père Noël n'a pas eu les mêmes cadeaux dans sa hotte que douze mois auparavant. En effet, en cette période de l'année où les constructeurs enregistrent le plus de ventes, les achats de PCs ont diminué. Deux études menées parallèlement et indépendamment l'une de l'autre sont arrivées aux mêmes conclusions : au quatrième trimestre 2010, le succès phénoménal des iPads et autres tablettes ont fait baisser le chiffre d'affaires mondial des ordinateurs. La hausse des ventes de PCs, comparativement entre décembre 2009 et décembre 2010, ne serait en effet que de 3.7% pour Gartner (et 2.7% pour I...

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  • jQuery CSS Property Monitoring Plug-in updated

    - by Rick Strahl
    A few weeks back I had talked about the need to watch properties of an object and be able to take action when certain values changed. The need for this arose out of wanting to build generic components that could 'attach' themselves to other objects. One example is a drop shadow - if I add a shadow behavior to an object I want the shadow to be pinned to that object so when that object moves I also want the shadow to move with it, or when the panel is hidden the shadow should hide with it - automatically without having to explicitly hook up monitoring code to the panel. For example, in my shadow plug-in I can now do something like this (where el is the element that has the shadow attached and sh is the shadow): if (!exists) // if shadow was created el.watch("left,top,width,height,display", function() { if (el.is(":visible")) $(this).shadow(opt); // redraw else sh.hide(); }, 100, "_shadowMove"); The code now monitors several properties and if any of them change the provided function is called. So when the target object is moved or hidden or resized the watcher function is called and the shadow can be redrawn or hidden in the case of visibility going away. So if you run any of the following code: $("#box") .shadow() .draggable({ handle: ".blockheader" }); // drag around the box - shadow should follow // hide the box - shadow should disappear with box setTimeout(function() { $("#box").hide(); }, 4000); // show the box - shadow should come back too setTimeout(function() { $("#box").show(); }, 8000); This can be very handy functionality when you're dealing with objects or operations that you need to track generically and there are no native events for them. For example, with a generic shadow object that attaches itself to any another element there's no way that I know of to track whether the object has been moved or hidden either via some UI operation (like dragging) or via code. While some UI operations like jQuery.ui.draggable would allow events to fire when the mouse is moved nothing of the sort exists if you modify locations in code. Even tracking the object in drag mode this is hardly generic behavior - a generic shadow implementation can't know when dragging is hooked up. So the watcher provides an alternative that basically gives an Observer like pattern that notifies you when something you're interested in changes. In the watcher hookup code (in the shadow() plugin) above  a check is made if the object is visible and if it is the shadow is redrawn. Otherwise the shadow is hidden. The first parameter is a list of CSS properties to be monitored followed by the function that is called. The function called receives this as the element that's been changed and receives two parameters: The array of watched objects with their current values, plus an index to the object that caused the change function to fire. How does it work When I wrote it about this last time I started out with a simple timer that would poll for changes at a fixed interval with setInterval(). A few folks commented that there are is a DOM API - DOMAttrmodified in Mozilla and propertychange in IE that allow notification whenever any property changes which is much more efficient and smooth than the setInterval approach I used previously. On browser that support these events (FireFox and IE basically - WebKit has the DOMAttrModified event but it doesn't appear to work) the shadow effect is instant - no 'drag behind' of the shadow. Running on a browser that doesn't support still uses setInterval() and the shadow movement is slightly delayed which looks sloppy. There are a few additional changes to this code - it also supports monitoring multiple CSS properties now so a single object can monitor a host of CSS properties rather than one object per property which is easier to work with. For display purposes position, bounds and visibility will be common properties that are to be watched. Here's what the new version looks like: $.fn.watch = function (props, func, interval, id) { /// <summary> /// Allows you to monitor changes in a specific /// CSS property of an element by polling the value. /// when the value changes a function is called. /// The function called is called in the context /// of the selected element (ie. this) /// </summary> /// <param name="prop" type="String">CSS Properties to watch sep. by commas</param> /// <param name="func" type="Function"> /// Function called when the value has changed. /// </param> /// <param name="interval" type="Number"> /// Optional interval for browsers that don't support DOMAttrModified or propertychange events. /// Determines the interval used for setInterval calls. /// </param> /// <param name="id" type="String">A unique ID that identifies this watch instance on this element</param> /// <returns type="jQuery" /> if (!interval) interval = 200; if (!id) id = "_watcher"; return this.each(function () { var _t = this; var el$ = $(this); var fnc = function () { __watcher.call(_t, id) }; var itId = null; var data = { id: id, props: props.split(","), func: func, vals: [props.split(",").length], fnc: fnc, origProps: props, interval: interval }; $.each(data.props, function (i) { data.vals[i] = el$.css(data.props[i]); }); el$.data(id, data); hookChange(el$, id, data.fnc); }); function hookChange(el$, id, fnc) { el$.each(function () { var el = $(this); if (typeof (el.get(0).onpropertychange) == "object") el.bind("propertychange." + id, fnc); else if ($.browser.mozilla) el.bind("DOMAttrModified." + id, fnc); else itId = setInterval(fnc, interval); }); } function __watcher(id) { var el$ = $(this); var w = el$.data(id); if (!w) return; var _t = this; if (!w.func) return; // must unbind or else unwanted recursion may occur el$.unwatch(id); var changed = false; var i = 0; for (i; i < w.props.length; i++) { var newVal = el$.css(w.props[i]); if (w.vals[i] != newVal) { w.vals[i] = newVal; changed = true; break; } } if (changed) w.func.call(_t, w, i); // rebind event hookChange(el$, id, w.fnc); } } $.fn.unwatch = function (id) { this.each(function () { var el = $(this); var fnc = el.data(id).fnc; try { if (typeof (this.onpropertychange) == "object") el.unbind("propertychange." + id, fnc); else if ($.browser.mozilla) el.unbind("DOMAttrModified." + id, fnc); else clearInterval(id); } // ignore if element was already unbound catch (e) { } }); return this; } There are basically two jQuery functions - watch and unwatch. jQuery.fn.watch(props,func,interval,id) Starts watching an element for changes in the properties specified. props The CSS properties that are to be watched for changes. If any of the specified properties changes the function specified in the second parameter is fired. func (watchData,index) The function fired in response to a changed property. Receives this as the element changed and object that represents the watched properties and their respective values. The first parameter is passed in this structure:    { id: itId, props: [], func: func, vals: [] }; A second parameter is the index of the changed property so data.props[i] or data.vals[i] gets the property value that has changed. interval The interval for setInterval() for those browsers that don't support property watching in the DOM. In milliseconds. id An optional id that identifies this watcher. Required only if multiple watchers might be hooked up to the same element. The default is _watcher if not specified. jQuery.fn.unwatch(id) Unhooks watching of the element by disconnecting the event handlers. id Optional watcher id that was specified in the call to watch. This value can be omitted to use the default value of _watcher. You can also grab the latest version of the  code for this plug-in as well as the shadow in the full library at: http://www.west-wind.com:8080/svn/jquery/trunk/jQueryControls/Resources/ww.jquery.js watcher has no other dependencies although it lives in this larger library. The shadow plug-in depends on watcher.© Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2011

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  • Code from my DevConnections Talks and Workshop

    - by dwahlin
    Thanks to everyone who attended my sessions at DevConnections Las Vegas. I had a great time meeting new people, discussing business problems and solutions and interacting. Here’s the code and slides for the sessions.  For those that came to the full-day Silverlight workshop I’ve included the slides that didn’t get printed plus a ton of code to help you get started with various Silverlight topics.   Get Started Building Silverlight Applications Building Architecturally Sound Silverlight Applications Using WCF RIA Services in Silverlight Applications (will post soon) Silverlight Data Integration Options and Usage Scenarios Silverlight Workshop Code

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  • Parallelism implies concurrency but not the other way round right?

    - by Cedric Martin
    I often read that parallelism and concurrency are different things. Very often the answerers/commenters go as far as writing that they're two entirely different things. Yet in my view they're related but I'd like some clarification on that. For example if I'm on a multi-core CPU and manage to divide the computation into x smaller computation (say using fork/join) each running in its own thread, I'll have a program that is both doing parallel computation (because supposedly at any point in time several threads are going to run on several cores) and being concurrent right? While if I'm simply using, say, Java and dealing with UI events and repaints on the Event Dispatch Thread plus running the only thread I created myself, I'll have a program that is concurrent (EDT + GC thread + my main thread etc.) but not parallel. I'd like to know if I'm getting this right and if parallelism (on a "single but multi-cores" system) always implies concurrency or not? Also, are multi-threaded programs running on multi-cores CPU but where the different threads are doing totally different computation considered to be using "parallelism"?

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