Total Cloud Control Keeps Getting Better
Join
Oracle Vice President of Systems Management Steve Wilson and a panel of
Oracle executives to find out how your enterprise cloud can achieve 10x
improved performance and 12x operational agility. Only Oracle
Enterprise Manager Ops Center 12c allows you to:
Accelerate mission-critical cloud deployment
Unleash the power of Solaris 11, the first cloud OS
Simplify Oracle engineered systems management
You’ll
also get a chance to have your questions answered by Oracle product
experts and dive deeper into the technology by viewing our demos that
trace the steps companies like yours take as they transition to a
private cloud environment.
Featured Speaker
With a special announcement by:
Steve Wilson Vice President, Systems Management, Oracle
John Fowler Executive Vice President, Systems, Oracle
Agenda
9:00 a.m. PT Keynote: Total Cloud Control for Systems
9:45 a.m. PT Panel Discussion with Oracle Hardware, Software, and Support Executives
10:15 a.m. PT Demo Series: A Step-by-Step Journey to Enterprise Clouds
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Industrial systems integrate Windows with real-time functionality such as machine vision and motion control
Robotics - Personal computer - Companies - Industrial - Robot
Headspring is putting on another free workshop at the Austin Microsoft office. This one will be led by Senior Consultant, Eric Anderson. Here are the details: Headspring Presents: Version Control and Build Systems for Growing Teams a workshop by Eric Anderson on: Does your team run into frequent conflicts with source control? Has your build system become a broken window with little hope of repair? Do you struggle to deploy minor changes and bug fixes while keeping the system stable?...Did you know that DotNetSlackers also publishes .net articles written by top known .net Authors? We already have over 80 articles in several categories including Silverlight. Take a look: here.
A recent survey on SQL Server Central showed that most database developers don't use Source Control. At first glance, it's a surprising thought. Unfortunately, the survey didn't ask about the scale of the database development. If there is only one database developer within a schema, who has an automated approach to regular generation of build scripts, then the need for a formal source control system is questionable....Did you know that DotNetSlackers also publishes .net articles written by top known .net Authors? We already have over 80 articles in several categories including Silverlight. Take a look: here.
The Service Bus costs $3.99 per Connection-month on a consumption basis for individually provisioned connections. Data transfers charges would also apply. Or, if you are able to forecast your needs ahead of time, you can purchase “Packs” of Connections. For example: $9.95 for a pack of 5 Connections, $49.75 for a pack of 25, $199.00 for a pack of 100, or $995 for a pack of 500, plus data transfer charges. Connection Packs represent an effective rate of $1.99 per Connection-month. Access Control will be priced at $1.99 per 100,000 Transactions, which includes token requests and management operations, plus associated data transfer. Typically, Service Bus developers depend on Access Control to secure their Connections. More Information: http://azurefeeds.com/post/865/Announcing_Windows_Azure_platform_commercial_offer_availability_and_updated_AppFabric_pricing.aspx Amit, S
Seit dem 14.09.2012 steht ein neues Release 2 von Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control 12c zur Verfügung.
Zum ersten Mal in der Geschichte von Enterprise Manager hat Oracle ein
neues Release für alle Komponenten und Plattformen am gleichen Tag
freigegeben. Das neue Release steht also sowohl bzgl. OMS als auch der
Agenten für alle unterstützten Plattformen zur Verfügung. Damit kann das
neue Release sofort für alle Umgebungen eingesetzt werden.
Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control 12c Release 2 trägt die
Versionsnummer 12.1.0.2 und ist vor allem ein Stabilitätsrelease. Es
enthält hauptsächlich Bugfixes und Performance-Verbesserungen. Es gibt
aber auch einige neue Features. Der heutige Tipp zeigt die neuen Features
auf.
You are probably very familiar with the startup programs function of Windows. While you can specify the applications you want to launch at the start of Windows, the ability to control the order in which they start is not available. However, there are a couple of ways you can easily overcome this limitation and control the startup order of applications.
Note: this tutorial should work for any version of Windows, including Windows Server
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I am trying to install ZendStudio 8 (Eclipse based) on 11.04 and am kinda stuck at the part were I can get it into the Applications list.
ZendStudio prior to version 8 came with a magic .bin which installed it all no problems, but now it simply comes as a folder all set up to be run as-is. I have copied this folder to /opt/ZendStudio, and I can launch the program using /opt/ZendStudio/ZendStudio but in the Unity Launcher it shows up with a grey box and a big Question Mark as it's icon.
However, I'd like it to be show up in the Applications list so I can search for it and load it like a normal application.
I also want to Pin it to the launcher so it stays there the whole time, and I tried this with running it directly but it didn't work and it didn't load up the application icon.
Any ideas how I can finish the install so it is in my menus etc?
One of the navigation mechanisms used in Windows 8 and Windows Phone is a Tile. A tile is a large rectangle that can have words and pictures that a user can click on. You can build your own version of a Tile in your WPF or Silverlight applications using a User Control. With just a little bit of XAML and a little bit of code-behind you can create a navigation system like that shown in Figure 1. Figure 1: Use a Tile for navigation. You can build a Tile User Control with just a little bit of XAML and...(read more)
I am pleased to announce that once again we are backporting a feature from DotNetNuke Professional Edition to the Community Edition. In DotNetNuke 5.3 PE we added a new control panel which leverages the Telerik TabStrip to provide increased functionality over the previous IconBar. Some of the new control panel functionality makes common tasks even easier and provides more streamlined access to some administrative areas of the application.More......Did you know that DotNetSlackers also publishes .net articles written by top known .net Authors? We already have over 80 articles in several categories including Silverlight. Take a look: here.
I'm running Ubuntu 11.10 with Openbox on my laptop. Since I need to plug different external displays into it and Openbox environment doesn't automatically pick them up, I thought the best solution I can come up with is to use gnome-control-center and it's display settings tool from within Openbox. But although this tool does detect monitors correctly, it can't do any change -- clicking Apply button just doesn't seem to do anything.
So my questions are: 1) how to get this tool working? 2) how to run "Displays" tool directly from command-line, skipping control center? 3) is there a better way to automatically detect and set resolutions on internal/external monitors under Openbox?
Please note I tried arandr too and it doesn't even work for my environment (doesn't detect external display plugging in at all). For what it's worth, my laptop is Lenovo G560, Ubuntu is x64 version with all the updates rolled over. Thanks for your consideration.
Once a week we round up some of the answers we’ve sent out to readers and share them with everyone. This week we’re looking at removing programs from the Windows startup routine, using DNS names on the local network, and restoring a vintage keyboard.
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The Access Control Management Tool (Acm.exe) is a command-line tool you can use to perform management operations (CREATE, UPDATE, GET, GET ALL, and DELETE) on the AppFabric Access Control entities (scopes, issuers, token policies, and rules). Basic Syntax The command line for Acm.exe follows the basic pattern of verb-noun. For example: acm.exe <command> <resource> [-option:<option value>] This tool will automatically generate random keys, which helps ensure that they can't easily be guessed by an attacker. Note that ACM.EXE is a thin wrapper around a REST Web Service (the AC management service). That helps to remember the commands it accepts, which are the typical resource management commands for a REST service: · Get(All) · Create · Update · Delete ACM.EXE.config file can be used to configure Host, Service and the Management key for a Service Namespace. Geeta, G