Search Results

Search found 10693 results on 428 pages for 'stay updated'.

Page 44/428 | < Previous Page | 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51  | Next Page >

  • Follow the action: OTN's YouTube Channel

    - by Bob Rhubart
    If you're not one of the 50,000 people participating in Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco next week you can still be a part of the action. Members of the OTN crew will be interviewing various community luminaries and subject matter experts and capturing some of the color and exitement on video. These videos will be posted on the Oracle Technology Network YouTube Channel daily.  Of course, you can also keep tabs on what's happening through social media via OTN's Facebook and Twitter (@oracletechnet) channels. Stay tuned...

    Read the article

  • Double Buffering in Panda3D (C++)

    - by jsvcycling
    How would I go about using Double Buffering (to create a loading screen) in Panda3D using C++? I've searched Google and found some forums that talk about the concept of swapping buffers, but I haven't seen any that show any type of source code (specifically Panda3D/C++). I'd like to try and stay away from using pure OpenGL code and work it through Panda3D, but if I have no other choice, then I'll have to go with OpenGL coding.

    Read the article

  • Oracle OpenWorld 2014 Preview: Don't-Miss Sessions, Hands-on Labs, and More

    - by Scott McNeil
    Check out all the latest Oracle Enterprise Manager 12c sessions at this year's Oracle OpenWorld. Organizers of the event, taking place in San Francisco from September 28 to October 2, expect heavy turnout at sessions, hands-on labs, and customer panels devoted to Oracle Enterprise Manager 12c. Find out who is participating and which sessions are most recommended by the Oracle Enterprise Manager team. Read More Stay Connected: Twitter | Facebook | YouTube | Linkedin | Newsletter Download the Oracle Enterprise Manager 12c Mobile app

    Read the article

  • How quickly to leave contract-to-hire gig where you don't want to be hired? [closed]

    - by nono
    So you move to a big new city with tons of software development opportunity, having taken a six month contract-to-hire job. The company treats you really well and has a good team and work environment. However, the recruiter assured you when offering the gig that it would be a good position in which you can advance your learning from more senior developers (a primary concern of yours) but you're starting to realize that a job recruiter isn't going to understand that the team in question isn't very up on modern software practices (you start to sympathize with this guy and read his post over and over again: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1586166/career-killer-nhibernate-oop-design-patterns-domain-driven-design-test-driv) and that much of the company's software is very old and very very poorly architected, and the company (like so many others) seems to be only concerned with continually extending the software without investing in any structural improvements. You're absolutely dismayed at how long it takes your team (including) to fulfill simple feature requests (maybe 500-1000% longer than with better designed software that you've worked on in the past), but no one else there seems to think anything of it. You find that the work and the company's business are intensely uninteresting to you, but due to the convoluted design of their various software systems, fulfilling the work will require as much mental engagement as any other development position. You feel a bit naive about not having asked the right questions during your interview process, and for not having anticipated that your team at your former podunk company might possibly be light-years ahead of any team in Big Shiny City, but you know you don't want to stay at this place, and (were it not for your personal, after-hours studying and personal programming efforts) fear that you might actually give a worse interview after completing your 6 months than you did when you started at the place. You read about how hard of a time local companies are having filling their positions with qualified software development candidates. You read all sorts of fabulous sounding job postings online and feel like you're really missing out. In spite of the comfortable environment you feel like you would willingly accept a somewhat more demanding or aggressive lifestyle to feel like you are learning and progressing and producing something meaningful. My questions are: how quickly do you leave and how do you go about giving a polite reason for departing? The contract is written to allow them to "can" you and to allow you to leave with 2 weeks notice. Do you ethically owe the 6 months? Upon taking the position, the company told you they were not interested in candidates who were intending to only stay for 6 months and then leave (you were not intending to bail after 6 months, at that time), so perhaps they might be fine if you split now, knowing that you don't want to stick around for the full time hire?

    Read the article

  • Will KeywordSpy Really Save You Time?

    Trying to find the best keywords for your projects has proven to be one of the most tedious chores related to Internet marketing. The object of the keyword is to make sure that people who are searching your product will stay on track. These are what allow people to come across your website. If you do not have much free time and are too busy, locating the right keyword can be a difficult as well as time consuming task.

    Read the article

  • Download window 7 sp1

    - by anirudha
    Today Microsoft release sp1 of windows 7. the sp1 come in hands of someone who have access to MSDN and technet early then today. well wait for somehour stay tune twitter.  http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?FamilyID=c3202ce6-4056-4059-8a1b-3a9b77cdfdda&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MicrosoftDownloadCenter+%28Microsoft+Download+Center%29&utm_content=Google+International#tm

    Read the article

  • rt2800 wireless keeps disconnecting

    - by Matthew Fumi
    My HP dm1 laptop has a rt2800sta wlan driver. My wireless doesn't usually have a problem connecting to a network, yet sometimes it does. The biggest issue I have found is that when it does connect, it doesn't stay connected. It continually connects and disconnects to the network. Does anyone know why this is happening, and how I would go about fixing the issue? Thank you and look forward to trying your solutions.

    Read the article

  • Groovy support in Java EE projects

    - by Martin Janicek
    As requested in the issue 144038, I've implemented support for Groovy in a Java enterprise projects. You should be able to combine Java/Groovy files, run them and thanks to the new Groovy JUnit tests support you can also run groovy tests together with your existing Java tests. I hope it will make your enterprise development (and especially enterprise testing) easier and more productive. Note: The changes will be propagated to the NetBeans daily build in a few days, so please stay in touch!

    Read the article

  • Meta Tags Keywords, Descriptions and Titles - Search Engine Optimization of Your Site Content

    Some web builders don't think that meta tag titles, descriptions, and keywords matter so much in their site and page rankings anymore. It is true that search engine algorithms are constantly changing in how they determine where your page rank. I am of the old school of thinking, and prefer to stay with my current method of search engine optimization and meta page data entry, at least for now.

    Read the article

  • Office lights on or off in programming department? How to decide? [closed]

    - by smp7d
    At my company, the programmers who sit in the same area are constantly fighting over whether the lights stay on or off. Because there is no official policy it makes it a particularly sticky situation. We are a typical cube-farm and we have those typical cube-farm fluorescent lights and smaller ones at our desks. With the lights off, it is difficult to read and you would probably need to turn on your desk light (which some people do anyway). All programmers in our department do most of their reading on their monitor because of the nature of our business. Some feel that we should have a vote to decide whether the lights stay on or off. A couple who prefer 'lights on' feel that the vote would need to be unanimous to turn them off as having them on is the more natural office setting. Those who want them off point out that all other departments keep their lights off. I have heard all of the arguments: -Fluorescent lights cause eye strain -Reading in dark causes eye strain -The desk lights can be used if light is needed -People from other departments feel uncomfortable approaching us in the "dark" -The monitors are harder to see in the light ... Right now, some of the developers turn off the lights and some turn them on. It really just depends who last walked by the switch. I am a bit sick of the controversy as it feels a bit childish at the moment. I'm tired of hearing about it and I'm tired of having to talk about it. I tried to help them decide but as I explained, voting wasn't enough. Do other programming departments have this same argument? What is the standard or traditionally accepted option in a programming area? Are there any good reasons for one way or the other outside of preference? How can we decide fairly? EDIT Just a little more info... We do not have clients/visitors come into our office. We do have windows and hall lights that make our environment plenty bearable with the lights off. It kind of resembles a meeting room that has the lights off during a powerpoint presentation.

    Read the article

  • Disaster Recovery For Small Business

    You may not be a Boy Scout, but the best way to protect your small business is to be prepared. We look at disaster recovery options to help you stay one step ahead of trouble and to sleep better at night.

    Read the article

  • Disaster Recovery For Small Business

    You may not be a Boy Scout, but the best way to protect your small business is to be prepared. We look at disaster recovery options to help you stay one step ahead of trouble and to sleep better at night.

    Read the article

  • Why Doing SEO "The Right" Way Works

    Online searching has been found to be the third most frequent activity for people who log on to the net. This is why it is important to stay on top of the search engine result pages, as this will help the users to find the website, thus increasing qualified traffic.

    Read the article

  • Revolutionize Your Business Using SEO

    A lot of new sites and businesses are emerging in the internet every single day. The need to make your website always easily visible, preferably on the first page of search engine results, is a must if you want not just for your business to stay but to succeed. Search Engine Optimization technique is one sure way to keep your site and business in a very good standing in spite of the competitions.

    Read the article

  • Apply the Latest SEO Techniques For Better Page Rankings

    The Internet offers infinite possibilities marketing possibilities. It's important to stay updated with the latest trends and techniques so you can have that extra edge over the competition. This article will discuss some of the latest techniques and tricks being applied to increase SEO ranking.

    Read the article

  • Disable updates on certain softwares

    - by tadatma
    When on trying to update an ubuntu distro (or for that matter any linux distribution) I often find a list of updates amounting to more than 150 mb or so. To my displeasure I find that the culprit more often than not has to do with libreoffice. I know I can untick those connected with libreoffice but I wonder if there is an elegant way; may be a small program in between that helps me untick those programs that I wish to stay un-updated.

    Read the article

  • Can't get Rewrite rule to keep original URL

    - by user38100
    I have these Rewrites, but I would like to have the URL stay the same as what is typed originally, I thought removing the [R] flags would stop it but it hasn't RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^examplea\.example\.com$ [NC] RewriteRule (.*) http://examplea.example.com:32400/web [L] RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^exampleb\.example\.com$ [NC] RewriteRule (.*) http://exampleb.example.com:9091 [L] Edit: would this work better? RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^hello.example.com$ RewriteRule ^(/)?$ welcome [L]

    Read the article

  • SEO Market Trends

    Online internet marketing is something here to stay. It has brought along with itself a glut of websites each competing hard with the other to make some place for itself on popular search engines.

    Read the article

  • The Need For Ongoing SEO

    While you've probably heard SEO compared to an investment, often the time and resources you're putting in to your SEO campaign get diluted over time. Without fresh links pointing to your site, most often your website will continue to fall in search results. Here are some of the reasons you'll need to continue SEO efforts to stay competitive.

    Read the article

  • How to Check How Many Inbound Links Your Competitor Has

    Inbound links are often referred to as off page search engine optimization (SEO) and they are really important to get a high ranking in the search engine results. To rank and stay higher than your competitor, you will need a way to find out how many back-links they have built to their web pages. In this article you will get a quick and easy way on how to check how many inbound links your competitor has.

    Read the article

  • SEO words: Information Technology vs IT

    - by Jahmic
    IT is in common usage as an abbreviation for "Information Technology" and people may search on it as that, such as "IT Support". However, it is also a "stop word". Any suggestions for optimal SEO usage? Edit: In line with the answers, on reviewing the search engine results, it seems that they are mostly interpreting "IT" correctly. The overall context I'm sure helps, so thus far, I'm going to stay with "IT".

    Read the article

  • It's All About Your Website

    When you expect people to come flocking to your website to buy your product, service or eCourse you need to remember that it is all about your website appeal to attract visitors where they will stay long enough to read your sales pitch, watch your video or listen to your audio. Convincing them to take a moment to consider what you have to offer is all in the way you make that first impression, that 3 seconds to catch their eye, arousing their curiosity while assuring your visitor that it is all about them.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51  | Next Page >