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  • Blink-Data vs Instinct?

    - by Samantha.Y. Ma
    In his landmark bestseller Blink, well-known author and journalist Malcolm Gladwell explores how human beings everyday make seemingly instantaneous choices --in the blink of an eye--and how we “think without thinking.”  These situations actually aren’t as simple as they seem, he postulates; and throughout the book, Gladwell seeks answers to questions such as: 1.    What makes some people good at thinking on their feet and making quick spontaneous decisions?2.    Why do some people follow their instincts and win, while others consistently seem to stumble into error?3.    Why are some of the best decisions often those that are difficult to explain to others?In Blink, Gladwell introduces us to the psychologist who has learned to predict whether a marriage will last, based on a few minutes of observing a couple; the tennis coach who knows when a player will double-fault before the racket even makes contact with the ball; the antiquities experts who recognize a fake at a glance. Ultimately, Blink reveals that great decision makers aren't those who spend the most time deliberating or analyzing information, but those who focus on key factors among an overwhelming number of variables-- i.e., those who have perfected the art of "thin-slicing.” In Data vs. Instinct: Perfecting Global Sales Performance, a new report sponsored by Oracle, the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) explores the roles data and instinct play in decision-making by sales managers and discusses how sales executives can increase sales performance through more effective  territory planning and incentive/compensation strategies.If you are a sales executive, ask yourself this:  “Do you rely on knowledge (data) when you plan out your sales strategy?  If you rely on data, how do you ensure that your data sources are reliable, up-to-date, and complete?  With the emergence of social media and the proliferation of both structured and unstructured data, how do you know that you are applying your information/data correctly and in-context?  Three key findings in the report are:•    Six out of ten executives say they rely more on data than instinct to drive decisions. •    Nearly one half (48 percent) of incentive compensation plans do not achieve the desired results. •    Senior sales executives rely more on current and historical data than on forecast data. Strikingly similar to what Gladwell concludes in Blink, the report’s authors succinctly sum up their findings: "The best outcome is a combination of timely information, insightful predictions, and support data."Applying this insight is crucial to creating a sound sales plan that drives alignment and results.  In the area of sales performance management, “territory programs and incentive compensation continue to present particularly complex challenges in an increasingly globalized market," say the report’s authors. "It behooves companies to get a better handle on translating that data into actionable and effective plans." To help solve this challenge, CRM Oracle Fusion integrates forecasting, quotas, compensation, and territories into a single system.   For example, Oracle Fusion CRM provides a natural integration between territories, which define the sales targets (e.g., collection of accounts) for the sales force, and quotas, which quantify the sales targets. In fact, territory hierarchy is a core analytic dimension to slice and dice sales results, using sales analytics and alerts to help you identify where problems are occurring. This makes territoriesStart tapping into both data and instinct effectively today with Oracle Fusion CRM.   Here is a short video to provide you with a snapshot of how it can help you optimize your sales performance.  

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  • Driving Growth through Smarter Selling

    - by Samantha.Y. Ma
    With the proliferation of social media and mobile technologies, the world of selling and buying has drastically changed, as buyers now have access to more information than they did in the past. In fact, studies have shown that buyers complete 60 percent of the buying process before they even engage with a salesperson. The old models of selling no longer work effectively; and the new way of selling is driven by customer insights. To succeed, sales need to be proactive, not reactive. They need to engage with the customer early, sometimes even before the customer’s needs are fully understood. In fact, the best sales reps prescribe a solution that the customer doesn't even know they need, often by leveraging social media to listen, engage and collaborate with peers. And they fully tap into the power of analytics and data to drive results.  Let’s look at some stats regarding challenges facing sales today. According to recent studies, sales reps spend 78 percent of their time doing administrative things -- such as planning, searching for information, data entry -- and only 22 percent of the time actually selling. Furthermore, 40 percent of B2B sales reps miss their quota, and only 3 percent of companies can say with confidence that their forecasts are “always accurate.” How do you drive growth in this modern day and age? It's not just getting your sales teams to work harder; it's helping them work smarter and providing them with a solution they want to use, on the device(s) they already know, giving them critical insights and tools to be more productive, increase win rates, and close deals faster. Oracle Sales Cloud was designed to do exactly that. It enables smarter selling that allows reps to sell more, managers to know more, and companies to grow more.  Let’s face it—if all CRM solutions worked well, sales executives wouldn’t be having the same headaches as they had in the past. Join Oracle’s Thomas Kurian and Doug Clemmans on Tuesday, October 22 as they explain: • How today’s sales processes have rendered many CRM systems obsolete • The secrets to smarter selling, leveraging mobile, social, and big data • How Oracle Sales Cloud enables smarter selling—as proven by Oracle and its customers Take the first step down the path toward smarter selling. With Oracle Sales Cloud, reps sell more, managers know more, and companies grow more.

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  • BYOD-The Tablet Difference

    - by Samantha.Y. Ma
    By Allison Kutz, Lindsay Richardson, and Jennifer Rossbach, Sales Consultants Normal 0 false false false EN-US ZH-TW X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif"; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman";} Less than three years ago, Apple introduced a new concept to the world: The Tablet. It’s hard to believe that in only 32 months, the iPad induced an entire new way to do business. Because of their mobility and ease-of-use, tablets have grown in popularity to keep up with the increasing “on the go” lifestyle, and their popularity isn’t expected to decrease any time soon. In fact, global tablet sales are expected to increase drastically within the next five years, from 56 million tablets to 375 million by 2016. Tablets have been utilized for every function imaginable in today’s world. With over 730,000 active applications available for the iPad, these tablets are educational devices, portable book collections, gateways into social media, entertainment for children when Mom and Dad need a minute on their own, and so much more. It’s no wonder that 74% of those who own a tablet use it daily, 60% use it several times a day, and an average of 13.9 hours per week are spent tapping away. Tablets have become a critical part of a user’s personal life; but why stop there? Businesses today are taking major strides in implementing these devices, with the hopes of benefiting from efficiency and productivity gains. Limo and taxi drivers use tablets as payment devices instead of traditional cash transactions. Retail outlets use tablets to find the exact merchandise customers are looking for. Professors use tablets to teach their classes, and business professionals demonstrate solutions and review reports from tablets. Since an overwhelming majority of tablet users have started to use their personal iPads, PlayBooks, Galaxys, etc. in the workforce, organizations have had to make a change. In many cases, companies are willing to make that change. In fact, 79% of companies are making new investments in mobility this year. Gartner reported that 90% of organizations are expected to support corporate applications on personal devices by 2014. It’s not just companies that are changing. Business professionals have become accustomed to tablets making their personal lives easier, and want that same effect in the workplace. Professionals no longer want to waste time manually entering data in their computer, or worse yet in a notebook, especially when the data has to be later transcribed to an online system. The response: the Bring Your Own Device phenomenon. According to Gartner, BOYD is “an alternative strategy allowing employees, business partners and other users to utilize a personally selected and purchased client device to execute enterprise applications and access data.” Employees whose companies embrace this trend are more efficient because they get to use devices they are already accustomed to. Tablets change the game when it comes to how sales professionals perform their jobs. Sales reps can easily store and access customer information and analytics using tablet applications, such as Oracle Fusion Tap. This method is much more enticing for sales reps than spending time logging interactions on their (what seem to be outdated) computers. Forrester & IDC reported that on average sales reps spend 65% of their time on activities other than selling, so having a tablet application to use on the go is extremely powerful. In February, Information Week released a list of “9 Powerful Business Uses for Tablet Computers,” ranging from “enhancing the customer experience” to “improving data accuracy” to “eco-friendly motivations”. Tablets compliment the lifestyle of professionals who strive to be effective and efficient, both in the office and on the road. Three Things Businesses Need to do to Embrace BYOD Make customer-facing websites tablet-friendly for consistent user experiences Develop tablet applications to continue to enhance the customer experience Embrace and use the technology that comes with tablets Almost 55 million people in the U.S. own tablets because they are convenient, easy, and powerful. These are qualities that companies strive to achieve with any piece of technology. The inherent power of the devices coupled with the growing number of business applications ensures that tablets will transform the way that companies and employees perform.

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  • Create firewall "profiles" for Windows 7

    - by Samantha
    Is there any way to configure a couple of firewall profiles in Windows 7? As I use mobile broadband on when traveling, I don't want virus scanner/windows updates etc running and chewing up my mobile data allocation. So would love to find a way to block everything except email ports and perhaps http. The kicker though is that when I'm back in the office, I want to just click a button to get my original firewall settings back. In the office I use WiFi and on the road tether to my android phone, also via WiFi, so can't restrict via network interface. Any ideas?

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  • how do i disable mod_proxy from apache?

    - by samantha
    hey, I have a CentOS running apache/tomcat, I would like to replace apache mod_proxy by mod_jk, I can see with #httpd -l that these modules are loaded: mod_proxy_connect.c mod_proxy_ftp.c mod_proxy_http.c mod_proxy_scgi.c mod_proxy_ajp.c mod_proxy_balancer.c how do i disable mod_proxy from apache? Thanks!

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  • Why can't I create e-mails on CPanel ?

    - by samantha
    Hello, I have a nasty problem creating e-mails on a cpanel account, the creation form doesn't work (clicking on the buttons does nothing) and the sourcecode of the page has a weird http://petlieutenants.com/css/article1.php in it... The quota for the account is normal, all the other accounts are working fine. What can possibly be causing this ? Thanks for your ideas !

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  • to measure throughput of testing device connect to server via AP

    - by samantha
    Description of project- I have a test tool to which DUT connects. The test tool has an access point in it and once DUT get connected to it via mac address we check RSSI and some other features of WiFi of DUT. Now I am wondering is there is any way I can measure throughput of Device under test via mac address of DUT from server side. Test-tool has LINUX fedora 11 in it and major coding is done in c/C++ and json command. Previously, I have tried to install ftp server on test-tool and DUT can connect to it and we can measure the throughput or data transfer rate, but this is not feasible solution as it requires lot of intervention from DUT. What I am interested in is 1) To run some script on server side /test tool and it gives me throughput of bandwidth of connected device may be via mac address of DUT OR 2) Server script transfer some files/packets to DUT and we can measure the throughput. Coding is not a major challenge at this stage , I just need some tool which requires minimum intervention from DUT.

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  • basics of using cut awk grep and sed...

    - by Samantha
    Hello there, I'm trying to extract the year from this output : sam@sam-laptop:~/shell$ date Mon Feb 8 21:57:00 CET 2010 sam@sam-laptop:~/shell$ date | cut -d' ' -f7 2010 sam@sam-laptop:~/shell$ date | awk '{print $6}' 2010 Are there any other ways to get the same result ? using maybe grep, sed etc ? Merci !

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  • problem FFmpeg avcodec_register_all iphone

    - by samantha
    Hi, I need to use ffmpeg for encodig. I have all *.a. My problem is tha when I use avcodec_register_all() xcode give me this error: "_deflate", referenced from: _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(lclenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(lclenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(zmbvenc.o) "_deflateEnd", referenced from: _flashsv_encode_end in libavcodec.a(flashsvenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) _encode_end in libavcodec.a(lclenc.o) _encode_end in libavcodec.a(zmbvenc.o) "_compress", referenced from: _encode_strip in libavcodec.a(tiffenc.o) (maybe you meant: _mp3_header_compress_bsf$non_lazy_ptr, _mp3_header_compress_bsf ) "_vorbis_analysis_init", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_lame_set_bWriteVbrTag", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_lame_set_VBR", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_crc32", referenced from: _png_write_chunk in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) _png_write_chunk in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) _png_write_chunk in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) "_x264_encoder_headers", referenced from: _X264_init in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) "_lame_encode_buffer", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_x264_encoder_encode", referenced from: _X264_frame in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) "_vorbis_comment_add_tag", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_theora_encode_tables", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_vorbis_block_init", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_x264_nal_encode", referenced from: _X264_frame in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) _X264_init in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) "_uncompress", referenced from: _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(cscd.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(dxa.o) _svq3_decode_init in libavcodec.a(h264.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(tiff.o) "_xvid_plugin_2pass2", referenced from: _ff_xvid_rate_control_init in libavcodec.a(libxvid_rc.o) _ff_xvid_rate_estimate_qscale in libavcodec.a(libxvid_rc.o) _ff_xvid_rate_estimate_qscale in libavcodec.a(libxvid_rc.o) _ff_xvid_rate_control_uninit in libavcodec.a(libxvid_rc.o) _xvid_plugin_2pass2$non_lazy_ptr in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) (maybe you meant: _xvid_plugin_2pass2$non_lazy_ptr) "_lame_set_num_channels", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_lame_set_VBR_q", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_vorbis_analysis_buffer", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_compress2", referenced from: _flashsv_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(flashsvenc.o) "_inflateEnd", referenced from: _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngdec.o) _flashsv_decode_end in libavcodec.a(flashsv.o) _decode_end in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_end in libavcodec.a(tscc.o) _decode_end in libavcodec.a(zmbv.o) "_lame_encode_buffer_interleaved", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_theora_comment_clear", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_x264_encoder_close", referenced from: _X264_close in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) "_inflate", referenced from: _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngdec.o) _flashsv_decode_frame in libavcodec.a(flashsv.o) _flashsv_decode_frame in libavcodec.a(flashsv.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(tscc.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(zmbv.o) "_theora_comment_init", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_vorbis_info_init", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "deflateInit2", referenced from: _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngenc.o) "_deflateReset", referenced from: _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(lclenc.o) _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(zmbvenc.o) "_theora_encode_init", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_lame_get_framesize", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_vorbis_analysis", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_inflateReset", referenced from: _flashsv_decode_frame in libavcodec.a(flashsv.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(tscc.o) _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(zmbv.o) "_lame_set_disable_reservoir", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_inflateSync", referenced from: _flashsv_decode_frame in libavcodec.a(flashsv.o) "_vorbis_info_clear", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_close in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_theora_encode_header", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_theora_clear", referenced from: _encode_close in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_theora_info_clear", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_xvid_plugin_lumimasking", referenced from: _xvid_plugin_lumimasking$non_lazy_ptr in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) (maybe you meant: _xvid_plugin_lumimasking$non_lazy_ptr) "_theora_encode_comment", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_lame_set_brate", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_theora_encode_YUVin", referenced from: _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_lame_init", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_lame_set_mode", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "deflateInit", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(lclenc.o) _encode_init in libavcodec.a(zmbvenc.o) "_vorbis_encode_setup_managed", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_lame_set_quality", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_vorbis_analysis_blockout", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_vorbis_analysis_wrote", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) _oggvorbis_encode_close in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "inflateInit", referenced from: _decode_frame in libavcodec.a(pngdec.o) _flashsv_decode_init in libavcodec.a(flashsv.o) _decode_init in libavcodec.a(lcldec.o) _decode_init in libavcodec.a(tscc.o) _decode_init in libavcodec.a(zmbv.o) "_vorbis_comment_clear", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_vorbis_bitrate_addblock", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_lame_set_in_samplerate", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_vorbis_encode_ctl", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_x264_param_default", referenced from: _X264_init in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) "_theora_info_init", referenced from: _encode_init in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) "_vorbis_encode_setup_init", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_vorbis_comment_init", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_vorbis_bitrate_flushpacket", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) _oggvorbis_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_xvid_plugin_single", referenced from: _xvid_plugin_single$non_lazy_ptr in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) (maybe you meant: _xvid_plugin_single$non_lazy_ptr) "_xvid_global", referenced from: _ff_xvid_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) "_xvid_encore", referenced from: _ff_xvid_encode_close in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) _ff_xvid_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) _ff_xvid_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libxvidff.o) "_vorbis_encode_setup_vbr", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_lame_set_out_samplerate", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_lame_init_params", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_vorbis_block_clear", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_close in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_lame_encode_flush", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_x264_encoder_open", referenced from: _X264_init in libavcodec.a(libx264.o) "_lame_close", referenced from: _MP3lame_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) _MP3lame_encode_close in libavcodec.a(libmp3lame.o) "_vorbis_dsp_clear", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_close in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_vorbis_analysis_headerout", referenced from: _oggvorbis_encode_init in libavcodec.a(libvorbis.o) "_theora_encode_packetout", referenced from: _encode_frame in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) _encode_close in libavcodec.a(libtheoraenc.o) ld: symbol(s) not found collect2: ld returned 1 exit status Also whene i use [code] codec = avcodec_find_encoder(CODEC_ID_H264); //CODEC_ID_H264 //codec = avcodec_find_encoder_by_name("mpeg1"); if (!codec) { fprintf(stderr, "codec not found\n"); exit(1); }[/code] codec is always null where is my error? best regards

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  • problem with awk script

    - by Samantha
    Hello, when I call my awk script, I keep getting an error : sam@sam-laptop:~/shell/td4$ awk -f agenda.awk -- -n Robert agenda.txt awk: agenda.awk:6: printf "Hello" awk: agenda.awk:6: ^ syntax error the script contains this : #!/usr/bin/awk BEGIN { } printf "Hello" END { } Thank you

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  • gethostbyname() and valgrind

    - by Samantha
    Hello, I keep getting this error whenever I call gethostbyname() in my C code. ==7983== Invalid read of size 1 ==7983== at 0x412AB2C: ____strtoul_l_internal (strtol_l.c:298) ==7983== by 0x412A46F: strtoul (strtol.c:110) ==7983== by 0x41D427E: inet_aton (inet_addr.c:143) ==7983== by 0x41D8FF3: __nss_hostname_digits_dots (digits_dots.c:144) ==7983== by 0x41DD0F9: gethostbyname (getXXbyYY.c:109) ==7983== by 0x804BE6F: connexion_function (in ***************) ==7983== by 0x8049A8F: main (in ***************) Any ideas ? Thanks,

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  • how to properly free a char **table in C

    - by Samantha
    Hello, I need your advice on this piece of code: the table fields options[0], options[1] etc... don't seem to be freed correctly. Thanks for your answers int main() { .... char **options; options = generate_fields(user_input); for(i = 0; i < sizeof(options) / sizeof(options[0]); i++) { free(options[i]); options[i] = NULL; } free(options); } char ** generate_fields(char *) { char ** options = malloc(256*sizeof(char *)); ... return options; }

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  • How can I disable multiple links with jQuery?

    - by Samantha J
    I have the following HTML: <a title="Login" data-href="/MyAccount/Access/Login" data-title="Admin" data-entity="n/a" id="loginLink" class="nav-button dialogLink"><b>Login</b></a> <a title="Register" data-href="/MyAccount/Access/Register" data-title="Admin" data-entity="n/a" id="registerLink" class="nav-button dialogLink"><b>Register</b></a> When a user clicks on the #loginLink or #registerLink I would like to disable the link and call a dialog script. I created the following function: $("#loginLink, #registerLink") .click(function () { $('#loginLink').prop('disabled', true); $('#registerLink').prop('disabled', true); dialog(this); }); It calls the dialog correctly but doesn't disable the links and if I click the buttons more than once it calls up more than one dialog box. Is there something I am doing wrong? I can't see why it would not work.

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  • secure client/server program in C with OpenSSL

    - by Samantha
    Hello, I'm trying to write a secure client/server program in C with OpenSSL. I've found a code sample at http://www.rtfm.com/openssl-examples/ but I get this error: server: SSL read problem client: Certificate doesn't verify I think the problem is with the certificate generation, but I cannot find it. Any idea? Thanks

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  • How to transform multiple line into one line in bash stdout ?

    - by Samantha
    Hello, I sometimes do this in my shell : sam@sam-laptop:~/shell$ ps aux | grep firefox | awk '{print $2}' 2681 2685 2689 4645 $ kill -9 2681 2685 2689 4645 Is there a way I can transform the multiple lines containing the PIDs into one line separated by spaces ? (It's a little bit annoying to type the PIDs every time and I really would like to learn :) ) Thanks a lot.

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  • "range of" in if condition C programming

    - by Samantha
    Hello, I'm working on a simple C prorgam, and i'ms tuck with an if test: int line_number = 0; if ((line_number >= argv[2]) && (line_number <= argv[4]) ) gcc says: cp.c:25: warning: comparison between pointer and integer cp.c:25: warning: comparison between pointer and integer What can I do to properly write the range of line I want to deal with ? Thank you!

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  • problem with closing sockets

    - by Samantha
    Hi, I'm trying to write a client/server program with threads. I close the socket once the connexion is finished. The servers gets plenty of new connexions, and the socket number (file descriptor) increases very quickly: after 5 minutes running I was already at around file descriptor number 800! Is this a normal thing? Do threads share file descriptors? When I do close(sockfd); is the number released immediatly or after a some time? PS: I used to do with fork(), and I didn't have this issue. Thanks

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  • iphone encode problem with ffmpeg

    - by samantha
    Hi, I need to encode a video from image. I use ffmpeg and compiling rigth. My problem is that when i try to opne video with quicktime on iphone, this give me a message "this movie format is not supported". I create a file mp4 with this parameter on context: context-time_base.num = 1; context-time_base.den = 15; context-codec_type = CODEC_TYPE_VIDEO; context-codec_id = CODEC_ID_H264; context-bit_rate = 1000000; context-width = width; context-height = height; context-keyint_min = 10; context-i_quant_factor = 0.71; context-bit_rate_tolerance = 20000; context-rc_max_rate = 100000; context-rc_buffer_size = 8835000; context-qcompress = 0.6; context-qmin = 10; context-qmax = 30; context-max_qdiff = 4; context-gop_size = 30; context->time_base.num = 1; context-time_base.den = 30; context-sample_aspect_ratio = av_d2q(1, 255); context-profile = 30; context-pix_fmt = PIX_FMT_YUV420P; context-flags |= CODEC_FLAG_LOOP_FILTER; where is my mistake?? thanks

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  • Using System.DateTime in a C# Lambda expression gives an exception

    - by Samantha J
    I tried to implement a suggestion that came up in another question: Stackoverflow question Snippet here: public static class StatusExtensions { public static IHtmlString StatusBox<TModel>( this HtmlHelper<TModel> helper, Expression<Func<TModel, RowInfo>> ex ) { var createdEx = Expression.Lambda<Func<TModel, DateTime>>( Expression.Property(ex.Body, "Created"), ex.Parameters ); var modifiedEx = Expression.Lambda<Func<TModel, DateTime>>( Expression.Property(ex.Body, "Modified"), ex.Parameters ); var a = "a" + helper.HiddenFor(createdEx) + helper.HiddenFor(modifiedEx); return new HtmlString( "Some things here ..." + helper.HiddenFor(createdEx) + helper.HiddenFor(modifiedEx) ); } } When implemented I am getting the following exception which I don't really understand. The exception points to the line starting with "var createdEx =" System.ArgumentException was unhandled by user code Message=Expression of type 'System.Nullable`1[System.DateTime]' cannot be used for return type 'System.DateTime' Source=System.Core StackTrace: Can anyone help me out and suggest what I could do to resolve the exception?

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  • How can I check if a value exists in a list using C#

    - by Samantha J
    I have the following code that gives me a list of id and names from the new ASP.NET MVC5 Identity: var identityStore = new IdentityStore(); var users = ( from user in identityStore.DbContext.Set<User>() select new { id = user.Id, name = user.UserName } ); How could I modify this so that it allows me to check if a UserName exists? Here's the user class: public class User : IUser { public User(); public User(string userName); [Key] public string Id { get; set; } public virtual ICollection<UserLogin> Logins { get; set; } public virtual UserManagement Management { get; set; } public virtual ICollection<UserRole> Roles { get; set; } public string UserName { get; set; } }

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  • How can I use Generics to create a way of making an IEnumerable from an enum?

    - by Samantha J
    Given an enum like this: public enum City { London = 1, Liverpool = 20, Leeds = 25 } public enum House { OneFloor = 1, TwoFloors = 2 } I am using the following code to give me an IEnumerable: City[] values = (City[])Enum.GetValues(typeof(City)); var valuesWithNames = from value in values select new { value = (int)value, name = value.ToString() }; The code works very good however I have to do this for quite a lot of enums. Is there a way I could create a generic way of doing this?

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