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  • Create a Slide Show in Windows 7 Media Center

    - by DigitalGeekery
    Are you looking for a nice way to create and display a slide show from your photo collection? Today we’ll show you how to create a slide show, how to add music to it, and watch it from the comfort of your couch in Windows 7 Media Center. Create Slide Show Launch Windows 7 Media Center and click on the Picture Library tile found under Pictures and Videos.   In the Pictures Library, scroll across to slide shows and click on Create Slide show.   Enter a name for the slide show and click Next.   If you are using a Windows Media Center remote, click on the OK button to bring up the onscreen keyboard. Use the directional buttons to navigate across the keyboard and press OK to select each letter. Click Done when finished. Select Picture Library and click Next. Select the pictures to include in your slide show. If using a remote, navigate through the images and press OK to select. If you are using a mouse, simply click on the selections. When you are finished, click Next.    Now, we can review and edit the slide show. Click the up or down pointing arrows to move pictures up and down in the order.  (more intuitive titles would be helpful in this case as opposed to the randomly generated titles in the example below) If you are finished, click Create. You can also choose to go back and add music to your slide show. (or even more pictures) We’ll take a look at adding some music in our example. Click on the Add More button.   Add Music to Your Slide Show Here we’ll select Music Library to add a song. Click Next.   You’ll now be able to browse your Music Library to select songs for your slide show. Select your songs and click Next.   When you are finished adding Music and Pictures click Create.   Once your slide show is saved, you can play it any time by going to clicking on slide shows in the Picture Library, then selecting the slide show title. Select play slide show when you’re ready to enjoy your new production.   If you ever want to edit or delete the slide show, select it in the Picture Library, and scroll to Actions. You’ll see those option under additional commands. You have the option to Edit Slide Show, Burn a CD/DVD, or Delete. Editing Slide Show Settings Within Media Center, go to Tasks… Click on Pictures…   Then choose Slide Shows. From the Slide Show settings you have the option to Show pictures in random order, Show picture information, Show song information, and Use Pan and zoom effect. You can also adjust the length of time to display each picture, and change the background color. Be sure to click Save to apply and changes before exiting. If you choose to show picture information, the picture title, date, and star rating will be displayed in the top right.   If your slide show is accompanied by music and you choose to show song information, you will get a translucent overlay for a few seconds at the beginning of each song to indicate the song, album, and artist. One of the really cool things about creating a slide show in Windows 7 Media Center is you can complete the entire process using just a Media Center remote. Can’t get enough slide shows? Check out how to turn your desktop into a picture slide show in Windows 7. Similar Articles Productive Geek Tips Using Netflix Watchnow in Windows Vista Media Center (Gmedia)Add Color Coding to Windows 7 Media Center Program GuideIntegrate Boxee with Media Center in Windows 7Schedule Updates for Windows Media CenterTurn Your Desktop into a Picture Slideshow in Windows 7 TouchFreeze Alternative in AutoHotkey The Icy Undertow Desktop Windows Home Server – Backup to LAN The Clear & Clean Desktop Use This Bookmarklet to Easily Get Albums Use AutoHotkey to Assign a Hotkey to a Specific Window Latest Software Reviews Tinyhacker Random Tips DVDFab 6 Revo Uninstaller Pro Registry Mechanic 9 for Windows PC Tools Internet Security Suite 2010 Case Study – How to Optimize Popular Wordpress Sites Restore Hidden Updates in Windows 7 & Vista Iceland an Insurance Job? Find Downloads and Add-ins for Outlook Recycle ! Find That Elusive Icon with FindIcons

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  • Slide Creation Checklist

    - by Daniel Moth
    PowerPoint is a great tool for conference (large audience) presentations, which is the context for the advice below. The #1 thing to keep in mind when you create slides (at least for conference sessions), is that they are there to help you remember what you were going to say (the flow and key messages) and for the audience to get a visual reminder of the key points. Slides are not there for the audience to read what you are going to say anyway. If they were, what is the point of you being there? Slides are not holders for complete sentences (unless you are quoting) – use Microsoft Word for that purpose either as a physical handout or as a URL link that you share with the audience. When you dry run your presentation, if you find yourself reading the bullets on your slide, you have missed the point. You have a message to deliver that can be done regardless of your slides – remember that. The focus of your audience should be on you, not the screen. Based on that premise, I have created a checklist that I go over before I start a new deck and also once I think my slides are ready. Turn AutoFit OFF. I cannot stress this enough. For each slide, explicitly pick a slide layout. In my presentations, I only use one Title Slide, Section Header per demo slide, and for the rest of my slides one of the three: Title and Content, Title Only, Blank. Most people that are newbies to PowerPoint, get whatever default layout the New Slide creates for them and then start deleting and adding placeholders to that. You can do better than that (and you'll be glad you did if you also follow item #11 below). Every slide must have an image. Remove all punctuation (e.g. periods, commas) other than exclamation points and question marks (! ?). Don't use color or other formatting (e.g. italics, bold) for text on the slide. Check your animations. Avoid animations that hide elements that were on the slide (instead use a new slide and transition). Ensure that animations that bring new elements in, bring them into white space instead of over other existing elements. A good test is to print the slide and see that it still makes sense even without the animation. Print the deck in black and white choosing the "6 slides per page" option. Can I still read each slide without losing any information? If the answer is "no", go back and fix the slides so the answer becomes "yes". Don't have more than 3 bullet levels/indents. In other words: you type some text on the slide, hit 'Enter', hit 'Tab', type some more text and repeat at most one final time that sequence. Ideally your outer bullets have only level of sub-bullets (i.e. one level of indentation beneath them). Don't have more than 3-5 outer bullets per slide. Space them evenly horizontally, e.g. with blank lines in between. Don't wrap. For each bullet on all slides check: does the text for that bullet wrap to a second line? If it does, change the wording so it doesn't. Or create a terser bullet and make the original long text a sub-bullet of that one (thus decreasing the font size, but still being consistent) and have no wrapping. Use the same consistent fonts (i.e. Font Face, Font Size etc) throughout the deck for each level of bullet. In other words, don't deviate form the PowerPoint template you chose (or that was chosen for you). Go on each slide and hit 'Reset'. 'Reset' is a button on the 'Home' tab of the ribbon or you can find the 'Reset Slide' menu when you right click on a slide on the left 'Slides' list. If your slides can survive doing that without you "fixing" things after the Reset action, you are golden! For each slide ask yourself: if I had to replace this slide with a single sentence that conveys the key message, what would that sentence be? This exercise leads you to merge slides (where the key message is split) or split a slide into many, if there were too many key messages on the slide in the first place. It can also lead you to redesign a slide so the text on it really is just explanation or evidence for the key message you are trying to convey. Get the length right. Is the length of this deck suitable for the time you have been given to present? If not, cut content! It is far better to deliver less in a relaxed, polished engaging, memorable way than to deliver in great haste more content. As a rule of thumb, multiply 2 minutes by the number of slides you have, add the time you need for each demo and check if that add to more than the time you have allotted. If it does, start cutting content – we've all been there and it has to be done. As always, rules and guidelines are there to be bent and even broken some times. Start with the above and on a slide-by-slide basis decide which rules you want to bend. That is smarter than throwing all the rules out from the start, right? Comments about this post welcome at the original blog.

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  • How to identify a selected slide is a master slide in PowerPoint 2003 Programmatically

    - by Gayan
    Recently I was working with a code to open a PowerPoint presentation (by vb.net) object and process each slide by slide. If processing slide is not null or a master slide I need to skip and go to the next one. Can anyone show me how to check whether a given slide is a master slide? Is there any way to check it by slide type? Public Sub CheckForProprtychecker(ByVal Presn As PowerPoint.Presentation) For SlideIndex As Integer = 1 To Presn.Slides.Count() If Presn.Slides(SlideIndex) Is Nothing Then Continue For End If ‘do other process Next End Sub

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  • Slide down and slide up div on click

    - by 422
    I am using the following code to open and close a div ( slide up/down ) using js I have the slide down event attached to a button and the slide up event sttached to close text. What I want is the button onclick to open and onclick again close the slide element. Here is the JS // slide down effect $(function(){ $('.grabPromo').click(function(){ var parent = $(this).parents('.promo'); $(parent).find('.slideDown').slideDown(); }); $('.closeSlide').click(function(){ var parent = $(this).parents('.promo'); $(parent).find('.slideDown').slideUp(); }); }); The HTML: <span class="grabPromo">Open</span> and in the slide down area i have <a class="closeSlide">Close</a> Any help appreciated. Ideally I want a down pointing arrow on the slide down button and a up pointing arrow to replace it to slide up on same button. And do away with the close link altogether. Any help appreciated. Cheers

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  • Wordpress and Jquery slide

    - by kwek-kwek
    I am integrating a Jquery slider inside of wordpress here is the demo of the slider. I can see the div that is their but for some reason it is not showing up. View the working site here Now my problem is that this code: <script type="text/javascript"> var _siteRoot='index.php',_root='index.php';</script> <script type="text/javascript" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/js/jquery.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/js/scripts.js"></script> represents and index.html, but in wordpress I enabled permalinks. Any clue what would be the _siteRoot is? here is the complete code HEADER <script type="text/javascript"> var _siteRoot='index.php',_root='index.php';</script> <script type="text/javascript" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/js/jquery.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/js/scripts.js"></script> Here are the images: <div id="slide-holder"> <div id="slide-runner"> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-1" src="images/nature-photo.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-2" src="images/nature-photo1.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-3" src="images/nature-photo2.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-4" src="images/nature-photo3.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-5" src="images/nature-photo4.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-6" src="images/nature-photo4.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <a href=""><img id="slide-img-7" src="images/nature-photo6.png" class="slide" alt="" /></a> <div id="slide-controls"> <p id="slide-client" class="text"><strong>post: </strong><span></span></p> <p id="slide-desc" class="text"></p> <p id="slide-nav"></p> </div> </div> <!--content featured gallery here --> </div> And the footer <script type="text/javascript"> if(!window.slider) var slider={};slider.data=[{"id":"slide-img-1"},{"id":"slide-img-2"},{"id":"slide-img-3"},{"id":"slide-img-4"},{"id":"slide-img-5"},{"id":"slide-img-6"},{"id":"slide-img-7"},{"id":"slide-img-8"}]; </script>

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  • bxSlider-4 text slide pass into the next slide

    - by Martialp
    I use http://bxslider.com/ to slide some content, just simple text. But it seem to have a problem with the text, not the image. I post a simple live exemple : http://jsfiddle.net/Sbt75/324/ As you can see on the exemple, we see the previous text from the previous slide on the left of the active slide. <div class="row"> <div class="large-6 columns"> <ul class="bxslider"> <li><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Accusantium, obcaecati, laudantium, blanditiis, adipisci quod eaque porro sapiente eligendi dicta voluptates voluptatum sunt aperiam totam modi quis vitae maxime! Dolor, possimus.</p></li> <li>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Odit, recusandae, delectus amet ipsa voluptate tempora architecto ad blanditiis officia perspiciatis nesciunt at ducimus quas nihil fuga. Qui optio minima accusamus?</li> <li><p class="right"> il etait une fois un grand mechant loupqui s'appelet jean et qui aimer courir dans l'herbe avec une grande harpe pour jouer dvant les enfants Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Odit, recusandae, delectus amet ipsa voluptate tempora architecto ad blanditiis officia perspiciatis nesciunt at ducimus quas nihil fuga. Qui optio minima accusamus? </p> </li> </ul> </div> </div> $(document).ready(function(){ $('.bxslider').bxSlider({ auto: false, autoControls: false, nextSelector: '#slider-next', prevSelector: '#slider-prev', nextText: 'Onward ?', prevText: '? Go back' }); });

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  • Slide decks of Windows Phone 7 talk @ MoMo

    - by subodhnpushpak
    Hi, I presented a talk on Windows Phone 7 @ MoMo and got awesome response, even though WP7 is quite new still. I also demoed 2 applications on both emulator and the actual device. It enjoy the look on audience faces when they see the app actually work on actual device. I see a great opportunity on WP7 and everyone I met agrees on the fact the WP7 has a very bright future ahead. The Ecosystem which WP7 has (developing/ debugging tools, emulator, almost flat learning curve,  office/sharepoint integration a lively forum, marketplace) makes it a major player in mobile, already. Here is the slide – deck. Here are the details of the event. http://momodelhi11.eventbrite.com/#m_1_100 And here are few snap shots of the event. Windows Phone 7 Demo VIEW SLIDE SHOW DOWNLOAD ALL    Do provide your comments.

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  • PrairieDevCon &ndash; Slide Decks

    - by Dylan Smith
    PrairieDevCon 2010 was an awesome time.  Learned a lot, and had some amazing conversations.  You guys even managed to convince me that NoSQL databases might actually be useful after all.   For those interested here’s my slide decks from my two sessions: Agile In Action Database Change Management With Visual Studio

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  • Links to Slide Decks from IT Pro Bootcamps

    - by Blog Author
    Here are the links to the slide decks from the IT Pro Bootcamps I have been doing:   http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/1hypervOverSMB.pdf http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/2hypervReplica.pdf http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/3hypervScale.pdf http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/4fileshares.pdf http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/5storage.pdf http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/6hypervShared.pdf http://www.nhcomputerlearning.com/event/7azure.pdf

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  • jQuery slide effect

    - by Ayrton
    Hi I'm looking for a slide effect for a navigation. But in my opinion the slide effect of jQuery is a little strange, or doesn't really fit my needs. The list items kind of appear but aren't animated (the container is only animated) when I apply the slideDown,slideUp,toggleSlide effect. I would like to have the list items animated as well. I've found an example of this: http://www.creative-exposure.co.uk/ If you someone could help me out, I would really appreciate it. yours truthfully

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  • Updated slide decks from SSMS presentation at SNESSUG

    - by AaronBertrand
    Tonight I spoke at the SNESSUG user group meeting in Warwick, RI. You can download the slide deck here (this is a 3.5 MB PDF with presenter notes): http://sqlblog.com/files/folders/23423/download.aspx If you attended the talk, please feel free to provide feedback at speakerrate.com: http://speakerrate.com/talks/2849-management-studio-tips-tricks Today also happened to be a birthday celebration for Grant Fritchey ( blog | twitter ). He blogged about the meeting and also took a picture of the cake...(read more)

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  • jQuery - select onchange to slide in / slide out div or form

    - by slayaz
    Hi, I am trying to enhance a form, by showing only relevant fields depending on initial selection via a form select field. It is an order form for 3 products and all 3 products have unique properties. My idea was to hide all the content in divs, then reveal the relevant div when the product is selected. I have found some solutions that show / hide a div, but none with any animation. It doesn't have to be a slide but just something nice! The alternative is instead of revealing a div, would be to load a seperate form, but this seems unnecessary. I am not sure whether i need a plug in, as I am pretty new to jquery. What i have in the html is: <style type="text/css"> .hide { display:none; } <select> <option value="" >Please select product below</option> <option value="pro1">Product 1</option> <option value="pro2">Product 2</option> </select> <div id="pro1" class="hide" >Product 1</div> <div id="pro2" class="hide" >Product 2</div> Many thanks in advance

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  • jQuery click event to make a div slide down and push next div out of viewport

    - by Josh
    I'm trying to figure out how to make jQuery slide #content2 down and replace content1 with it while making it look like #content1 is actually being pushed down by #content1 removing it from view... Then the same button that was clicked to make #content2 replace #content1 would also need to do the reverse effect by replacing #content2 with #content1 making them slide up and push each other out of the way... I'm not all that great with jQuery so I'm sure I've gone about this the wrong way, but here's what I've tried: $(document).ready(function() { $('#click').click(function() { if($('#content1').is(':visible')) { $('#content1').slideUp(); } else { $('#content2').slideDown(); } }).click(function() { if($('#content1').is(':visible')) { $('#content2').slideDown(); } else { $('#content1').slideUp(); } }); });

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  • jquery .show("slide") options (WITH PICS!!)

    - by Micky Fokken
    Here's my code. It slides in from the left. <script> $('#goalHS').click(function() { $('div[id^="div-detailed-goal"]').show("slide"); }); $("#redline").click(function() { $('div[id^="div-detailed-goal"]').fadeOut("slow"); }); </script> Instead of fading in from the left, I want a red line to be drawn and then have the DIV slide in from the top. How can I get it to do the following? Horizontal red line grows out from center. --- Red line finishes growing: Content slides in from underneath red line. COntent does NOT show above red line: c. content, content, content d. content, content, content Content finishes sliding in. Awesomeness ensues! a. content, content, content b. content, content, content c. content, content, content d. content, content, content I've tried 4 different ways, and I've tried using other js plugin libraries, but I'm not quite that advanced to figure it out.

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  • How can I create and add a new slide type to the New Slide menu in PowerPoint?

    - by ObligatoryMoniker
    On the Home ribbon in Power Point 2007 there is a new slide button with an arrow that shows you various types of slides that you can add to your presentation: Title Slide, Title and Content, Comparison, Title Only, etc. I want to design a new type of slide that has 4 content areas instead of two and then be able to add new slides of this type using the new slide menu. I know that I can add new Power Point templates but that would require me to start a new presentation with my custom slide type in it and the copy and paste that slide into the current presentation that I am already working on. How can I create a new slide type and then add it to the menu so that I can quickly create new slides of my new 4 content area slide type?

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  • Slide 2d Vector to destination over a period of time

    - by SchautDollar
    I am making a library of GUI controls for games I make with XNA. I am currently developing the library as I make a game so I can test the features and find errors/bugs and hopefully smash them right away. My current issue is on a slide feature I want to implement for my base class that all controls inherit. My goal is to get the control to slide to a specified point over a specified amount of time. Here is the #region containing the code #region Slide private bool sliding; private Vector2 endPoint; private float slideTimeLeft; private float speed; private bool wasEnabled; private Vector2 slideDirection; private float slideDistance; public void Slide(Vector2 startPoint, Vector2 endPoint, float slideTime) { this.location = startPoint; Slide(endPoint,slideTime); } public void Slide(Vector2 endPoint, float slideTime) { this.wasEnabled = this.enabled; this.enabled = false; this.sliding = true; Vector2 tempLength = endPoint - this.location; this.slideDistance = tempLength.Length(); //Was this.slideDistance = (float)Math.Sqrt(tempLength.LengthSquared()); this.speed = slideTime / this.slideDistance; this.endPoint = endPoint; this.slideTimeLeft = slideTime; } private void UpdateSlide(GameTime gameTime) { if (this.sliding) { this.slideTimeLeft -= gameTime.ElapsedGameTime.Milliseconds; if (this.slideTimeLeft >= 0 ) { if ((this.endPoint-this.location).Length() != 0){//Was if (this.endPoint.LengthSquared() > 0 || this.location.LengthSquared() > 0) { this.slideDirection = Vector2.Normalize(this.endPoint - this.location); } this.location += this.slideDirection * speed * gameTime.ElapsedGameTime.Milliseconds;//This is where I believe the issue is, but I'm not sure. It seems right to me... (Even though it doesn't work) } else { this.enabled = this.wasEnabled; this.location = this.endPoint;//After time, the controls position will get set to be the endpoint. this.sliding = false; } } } #endregion this.location is the location of the control elsewhere defined in the class. I have looked at this blog as a huge reference and have googled around quite and have looked on many forums but can't find anything that shows how to implement it. Please and Thanks for your time! EDIT: I have switched this line "this.location += this.slideDirection * speed * gameTime.ElapsedGameTime.Milliseconds;" several times to see what it does. My issue is getting the control to smoothly move to the end location. It moves after the time has expired, but It doesn't move other then that except flash in my face. EDIT2: I have used the first slide method with 3 parameters and it works except it doesn't do it in a period of time and once it gets to its destination, it starts moving randomly towards the previous location and the end location.

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  • How to auto advance a PowerPoint slide after an exit animation is over?

    - by joooc
    PowerPoint entrance animation set up with "Start: With Previous" starts right when a new slide is advanced. However, if you set up an exit animation in the same way, it doesn't start with a slide ending sequence. Instead, the "Start: On Click" trigger needs to be used and after your exit animation is over you still need one extra click just to advance to the next slide. Workarounds to this are obvious: create a duplicate slide, make your ending animations from the original slide being your starting animations on the duplicate slide and let them be followed with whatever you want or create a transition slide with those ending animations only and set up "Change Advance slide - Automatically after - [the time it takes your animations to finish]". These workarounds will make it work for your audience, visually. However, it has an impact on slide numbers you might need to adjust accordingly and/or duplicate content changes. If you are the only one creating and using your presentation, this might be just fine. But if you are creating a presentation in collaborative mode with three other people and don't even know who will be the presenter at the end, you can mess things up. Let's be specific: most of my slides have 0.2s fly in entrance animation applied to blocks of content coming from right, bottom or left. Advancing to the next slide I want them to fly out in another 0.2s exit animation being followed by new slide 0.2s fly in entrance animation of the new blocks. The swapping of the blocks should be triggered while advancing to the next slide, as usually. As mentioned, I'm not able to achieve this without one extra click between the slides. I wrote a VBA script that should start together with an exit animation and will auto advance a slide after 0.3s when the exit animation is over. That way I should get rid of those extra clicks which are needed right now. Sub nextslide() iTime = 0.3 Start = Timer While Timer < Start + iTime DoEvents Wend With SlideShowWindows(1).View .GotoSlide (ActivePresentation.SlideShowWindow.View.Slide.SlideIndex + 1) End With End Sub It works well when binded on a box, button or another object. But I can't make it run on a single click (anywhere on the slide) so that it could start together with the exit animation onclick trigger. Creating a big transparent rectangular shape over the whole slide and binding the macro on it doesn't help either. By clicking it you only get the macro running, exit animation is not triggered. Anyway, I don't want to bind the macro to any other workaround object but the slide itself. Anyone knows how to trigger a PowerPoint VBA script on slide onclick event? Anyone knows a secret setting that will make the exit animation work as expected i.e. animating right before exiting a slide while transitioning to the next one? Anyone knows how to beat this dragon? Thank you!

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  • Slide-decks from recent Adelaide SQL Server UG meetings

    - by Rob Farley
    The UK has been well represented this summer at the Adelaide SQL Server User Group, with presentations from Chris Testa-O’Neill (isn’t that the right link? Maybe try this one) and Martin Cairney. The slides are available here and here. I thought I’d particularly mention Martin’s, and how it’s relevant to this month’s T-SQL Tuesday. Martin spoke about Policy-Based Management and the Enterprise Policy Management Framework – something which is remarkably under-used, and yet which can really impact your ability to look after environments. If you have policies set up, then you can easily test each of your SQL instances to see if they are still satisfying a set of policies as defined. Automation (the topic of this month’s T-SQL Tuesday) should mean that your life is made easier, thereby enabling to you to do more. It shouldn’t remove the human element, but should remove (most of) the human errors. People still need to manage the situation, and work out what needs to be done, etc. We haven’t reached a point where computers can replace people, but they are very good at replace the mundaneness and monotony of our jobs. They’ve made our lives more interesting (although many would rightly argue that they have also made our lives more complex) by letting us focus on the stuff that changes. Martin named his talk Put Your Feet Up, which nicely expresses the fact that managing systems shouldn’t be about running around checking things all the time. It must be about having systems in place which tell you when things aren’t going well. It’s never quite as simple as being able to actually put your feet up, but certainly no system should require constant attention. It’s definitely a policy we at LobsterPot adhere to, whether it’s an alert to let us know that an ETL package has run successfully, or a script that generates some code for a report. If things can be automated, it reduces the chance of error, reduces the repetitive nature of work, and in general, keeps both consultants and clients much happier.

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  • Slide-decks from recent Adelaide SQL Server UG meetings

    - by Rob Farley
    The UK has been well represented this summer at the Adelaide SQL Server User Group, with presentations from Chris Testa-O’Neill (isn’t that the right link? Maybe try this one) and Martin Cairney. The slides are available here and here. I thought I’d particularly mention Martin’s, and how it’s relevant to this month’s T-SQL Tuesday. Martin spoke about Policy-Based Management and the Enterprise Policy Management Framework – something which is remarkably under-used, and yet which can really impact your ability to look after environments. If you have policies set up, then you can easily test each of your SQL instances to see if they are still satisfying a set of policies as defined. Automation (the topic of this month’s T-SQL Tuesday) should mean that your life is made easier, thereby enabling to you to do more. It shouldn’t remove the human element, but should remove (most of) the human errors. People still need to manage the situation, and work out what needs to be done, etc. We haven’t reached a point where computers can replace people, but they are very good at replace the mundaneness and monotony of our jobs. They’ve made our lives more interesting (although many would rightly argue that they have also made our lives more complex) by letting us focus on the stuff that changes. Martin named his talk Put Your Feet Up, which nicely expresses the fact that managing systems shouldn’t be about running around checking things all the time. It must be about having systems in place which tell you when things aren’t going well. It’s never quite as simple as being able to actually put your feet up, but certainly no system should require constant attention. It’s definitely a policy we at LobsterPot adhere to, whether it’s an alert to let us know that an ETL package has run successfully, or a script that generates some code for a report. If things can be automated, it reduces the chance of error, reduces the repetitive nature of work, and in general, keeps both consultants and clients much happier.

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  • Commercial Software Development – presentation slide decks for DDD SouthWest 2.0

    - by Liam Westley
    Thanks to everyone who voted me onto the DDD SouthWest agenda, and a big thanks to all who attended the session and took the time to give feedback to rank me No.3 in the overall conference in presentation skills. There were some good feedback comments, which I'll try to make sure I take note of for future presentations. For those who came to the session, or even for those who were on one of the other tracks, I’ve uploaded the presentation for you to download.  I created a more simple, and smaller, PowerPoint without all the fancy animations and video clips, which is available as a compressed ZIP file,   http://www.tigernews.co.uk/blog-twickers/dddsw/commercialsoftwaredev-dddsw2.zip I also printed the presentation with speaker notes (which contain most of the information I was talking about) using PDFCreator, which is available as an Adobe Acrobat PDF here,   http://www.tigernews.co.uk/blog-twickers/dddsw/commercialsoftwaredev-dddsw2.pdf ... and if PowerPoint presentations don't do it for you, also thanks to Craig Murphy, you can watch a video of the presentation that I gave at DDD8 in Microsoft TVP, Reading,  http://vimeo.com/9216563

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  • Please help! Every Post link links to the most recent post Wordpress

    - by kwek-kwek
    I got the site up on time, with one blog post up. Later I added another one and tested it. Big problem! Any link that used to take you to the old post (ie: side-bar "Recent Posts" links) now takes you to the newest one. I tested it by adding a third post, and got the same result. This is a custom wordpress theme and I have a, page.php <?php get_header(); ?> <?php if (have_posts()) : while (have_posts()) : the_post(); ?> <div id="BodyWrap"> <!--MAIN CONT--> <div id="mainCont"> <?php get_sidebar(); ?> <?php if (is_page(array('home'))) { ;?> <div id="rotateBanner"> <div id="slide-holder"> <div id="slide-runner"> <img id="slide-img-1" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial2.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-5" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial5.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-2" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial1.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-6" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial6.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-3" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial3.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-7" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial7.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-4" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial4.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-8" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial8.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <div id="slide-controls"> <p id="slide-client" class="text" style="display:none;"><span></span></p> <p id="slide-desc" class="text" style="display:none;"></p> <p id="slide-nav" style="display:none;"></p> </div> </div> <script type="text/javascript"> if(!window.slider) var slider={};slider.data=[{"id":"slide-img-1","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-5","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-2","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-6","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-3","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-7","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-4","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-8","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"}]; </script> </div> </div> <?php } ?> <?php if (is_page(array('accueil'))) { ;?> <div id="rotateBanner"> <div id="slide-holder"> <div id="slide-runner"> <img id="slide-img-1" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial1-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-5" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial5-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-2" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial2-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-6" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial6-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-3" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial3-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-7" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial7-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-4" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial4-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <img id="slide-img-8" src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/banner/testimonial8-fr.jpg" class="slide" alt="" /> <div id="slide-controls"> <p id="slide-client" class="text" style="display:none;"><span></span></p> <p id="slide-desc" class="text" style="display:none;"></p> <p id="slide-nav" style="display:none;"></p> </div> </div> <script type="text/javascript"> if(!window.slider) var slider={};slider.data=[{"id":"slide-img-1","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-5","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-2","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-6","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-3","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-7","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-4","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"},{"id":"slide-img-8","client":"nature beauty","desc":"nature beauty photography"}]; </script> </div> </div> <?php } ?> <?php if (is_page(array('contact-us'))) { ;?> <div id="rotateBanner"> <?php custom_field_image() ?> </div> <?php } ?> <div id="mainCopy"> <div id="content"> <h2> <?php if (is_page('home','accueil')) : ?> <?php else : ?> <?php single_post_title(); ?> <?php endif; ?></h2> <?php the_content('<p class="serif">Read the rest of this page &raquo;</p>'); ?> <?php wp_link_pages(array('before' => '<p><strong>Pages:</strong> ', 'after' => '</p>', 'next_or_number' => 'number')); ?> </div> </div> <?php if (is_page(array('home','accueil'))) { ;?> <div id="rightCol2"> <div id="Fworks"> <h2>Featured work</h2> <li><img src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/portage-thumb.jpg" width="234" height="92" border="0" alt="" /></li> <li><a href="<?php bloginfo('url'); ?>our-work/foundation-on-antivirals"><img src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/fav-thumb.jpg" width="234" height="92" border="0" alt="" /></a></li> <li><img src="<?php bloginfo('template_url'); ?>/images/danslejardin-thumb.jpg" width="234" height="92" border="0" alt="" /></li> </div> <div id="NewEvents"> <?php if ( (strtolower(ICL_LANGUAGE_CODE) == 'en') ) {echo("<h2>News &amp; Events</h2");} ?> <?php if ( (strtolower(ICL_LANGUAGE_CODE) == 'fr')) echo("<h2>Nouvelles</h2") ?> <div id="NewsListings"> <ul> <?php //dbem_get_events_list("limit=5&scope=al&order=DESC"); ?> <?php include('events.php');?> </ul> </div> </div> </div> <?php } ?> </div> </div> <?php endwhile; endif; ?> <?php get_footer(); ?> single.php <?php /** * @package WordPress * @subpackage Default_Theme */ get_header(); ?> <div id="BodyWrap"> <!--MAIN CONT--> <div id="mainCont"> <?php get_sidebar(); ?> <?php if (is_page(array('home','contact-us'))) { ;?> <div id="rotateBanner"> <?php custom_field_image() ?> </div> <?php } ?> <div id="mainCopy"> <div id="content" class="widecolumn" role="main"> <?php if (have_posts()) : while (have_posts()) : the_post(); ?> <!-- <div class="navigation"> <div class="alignleft"><?php previous_post_link('&laquo; %link') ?></div> <div class="alignright"><?php next_post_link('%link &raquo;') ?></div> </div> <br class="clr" />--> <div <?php post_class() ?> id="post-<?php the_ID(); ?>"> <h2><?php the_title(); ?></h2> <div class="entry"> <?php the_content('<p class="serif">Read the rest of this entry &raquo;</p>'); ?> <?php wp_link_pages(array('before' => '<p><strong>Pages:</strong> ', 'after' => '</p>', 'next_or_number' => 'number')); ?> <?php the_tags( '<p>Tags: ', ', ', '</p>'); ?> <!--<p class="postmetadata alt"> <small> This entry was posted <?php /* This is commented, because it requires a little adjusting sometimes. You'll need to download this plugin, and follow the instructions: http://binarybonsai.com/wordpress/time-since/ */ /* $entry_datetime = abs(strtotime($post->post_date) - (60*120)); echo time_since($entry_datetime); echo ' ago'; */ ?> on <?php the_time('l, F jS, Y') ?> at <?php the_time() ?> and is filed under <?php the_category(', ') ?>. You can follow any responses to this entry through the <?php post_comments_feed_link('RSS 2.0'); ?> feed. <?php if ( comments_open() && pings_open() ) { // Both Comments and Pings are open ?> You can <a href="#respond">leave a response</a>, or <a href="<?php trackback_url(); ?>" rel="trackback">trackback</a> from your own site. <?php } elseif ( !comments_open() && pings_open() ) { // Only Pings are Open ?> Responses are currently closed, but you can <a href="<?php trackback_url(); ?> " rel="trackback">trackback</a> from your own site. <?php } elseif ( comments_open() && !pings_open() ) { // Comments are open, Pings are not ?> You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed. <?php } elseif ( !comments_open() && !pings_open() ) { // Neither Comments, nor Pings are open ?> Both comments and pings are currently closed. <?php } edit_post_link('Edit this entry','','.'); ?> </small> </p>--> </div> </div> <?php comments_template(); ?> <?php endwhile; else: ?> <p>Sorry, no posts matched your criteria.</p> <?php endif; ?> </div> </div> </div> </div> <?php get_footer(); ?> index.php <?php get_header(); ?> <!--MAIN WRAP--> <div id="BodyWrap"> <!--MAIN CONT--> <div id="mainCont"> <?php get_sidebar(); ?> <div id="mainCopy"> <div id="content"> <?php if ( have_posts() ) : while ( have_posts() ) : the_post(); ?> <div id="BGHeadTitle"><h2><a href="<?php the_permalink() ?>"><?php the_title(); ?></a></h2></div> <?php the_content(); ?> <p><?php the_time('F j, Y'); ?> at <?php the_time('g:i a'); ?> | <?php the_category(', '); ?> | <?php comments_number('No comment', '1 comment', '% comments'); ?></p> <?php comments_template(); // Get wp-comments.php template ?> <?php endwhile; else: ?> <h2>Woops...</h2> <p>Sorry, no posts we're found.</p> <?php endif; ?> <p align="center"><?php posts_nav_link(); ?></p> </div> </div> </div> </div> <?php get_footer(); ?> my recent post code : <ul> <?php query_posts('cat=3,4,5&posts_per_page=5&order=ASC&orderby=date'); if ( have_posts() ) : while ( have_posts() ) : the_post()?> <li> <span class="date"><?php the_time('M j') ?></span> <a href="<?php the_permalink(); ?>" title="<?php the_title(); ?>"><?php the_title(); ?></a> </li> <?php endwhile; ?> <?php rewind_posts(); ?> </ul> I am really stuck the site went live and when I was working on the testserver I only noticed it.view the site here »

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  • slide animation skipped when using updatepanel callback

    - by superexsl
    Hey, I'm trying to use UpdatePanels and JQuery but the panels seem to cancel out the JQuery. I want the user to press the search button, have the system perform the search using AJAX and then display the search results by sliding down the div using JQuery. However, it seems that if there are any delays, (I put the thread to sleep for a second), then the results just appear instead of sliding down. If I remove the sleep thread the sliding animation is fine. I've got the code below to execute the JQuery once the AJAX is loaded: <script type="text/javascript"> var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance(); prm.add_pageLoaded(showDiv); function showDiv(sender, args){ $("#results_bar").slideDown('slow'); } </script> Any ideas why the animation is skipped if there's a delay? Thanks

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  • PowerPoint '10 avoid animation completion on click & advance slide or start new one

    - by ScottS
    Scenario I have PowerPoint 2010 On the "Transitions" tab the "Advance Slide On Mouse Click" check box is checked. I have a long, slow, timed, non-repeating animation working in the background of the slide. I click to advance the slide before the animation is finished, but ... Instead of advancing the slide, the animation moves to the completed state ... Forcing a second click to actually advance the slide. Additionally If I have other animations on the slide that are initiated by a click, the long animation also advances to a finished state before starting the new animation. Desired Behavior On click, I want the slide to advance or the next on-click animation to start whether the long animation is done or not, and without having that long animation first "complete" itself. In the case of another animation, I simply want the long animation to continue, while also doing the new animation. Ultimate Question Is there a way to either: Set an option somewhere to not have that animation complete on click and simply "continue" to animate with the start of a new animation or to advance the slide (as the case may be)? Create a VBA script that will produce the desired behavior for the long animation?

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  • PowerPoint avoid animation completion on click & advance slide or start new one

    - by ScottS
    Scenario I have PowerPoint 2010 On the "Transitions" tab the "Advance Slide On Mouse Click" check box is checked. I have a long, slow, timed, non-repeating animation working in the background of the slide. I click to advance the slide before the animation is finished, but ... Instead of advancing the slide, the animation moves to the completed state ... Forcing a second click to actually advance the slide. Additionally If I have other animations on the slide that are initiated by a click, the long animation also advances to a finished state before starting the new animation. Desired Behavior On click, I want the slide to advance or the next on-click animation to start whether the long animation is done or not, and without having that long animation first "complete" itself. In the case of another animation, I simply want the long animation to continue, while also doing the new animation. Ultimate Question Is there a way to either: Set an option somewhere to not have that animation complete on click and simply "continue" to animate with the start of a new animation or to advance the slide (as the case may be)? Create a VBA script that will produce the desired behavior for the long animation?

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