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06,March,2007
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Windows Vista - WinSta0 isolation explained
B# .NET Blog
Time for another security feature in Windows Vista: WinSta0 isolation. The first question that might pop up in your head is "So, what exactly is WinSta0?". Keith Brown has the answer . The problem with
Filed under CSharp | on 2007 Mar 06
Start++ Is All That And Then Some
youve been HAACKED
Update: I have an even better startlet for stopping and starting services in my comments. If you’re running Vista, run, don’t walk, and go download and install Start++ (thanks to Omar Shahine for turning
Filed under Windows VISTA | on 2007 Mar 06
Andrew Birkett has stumbled across an interesting side effect of using SVN checkouts for deploying Rails applications in that, without adequate protection, SVN metadata is made available for all to see
Filed under Web Security | on 2007 Mar 06
Occasionally I get to do cool non-traditional things as part of my job. Two weeks ago, I was the guest star in a fun "Red vs. Blue" Halo video produced by Rooster Teeth. You can watch it online here (it
Filed under ASP.NET | on 2007 Mar 06
Streaming with LINQ to XML - Part 1
Microsoft XML Teams WebLog
This is the first of a multi-post series on how to use LINQ to XML in scenarios that require streaming over a large input and/or output data source rather than loading a document into memory, processing
Filed under XML/XSLT | on 2007 Mar 06
Hardware Boneyard - Using the CueCat with .NET
Coding4Funs WebLog
In this installment of "Some Assembly Required" column, Scott Hanselman borrows Travis Illig's CueCat BarCode scanner and creates a plugin for Windows Live Writer than lets him blog more easily about books
Filed under Design, Architecture | on 2007 Mar 06
Don't touch me! - Interfacing with a Fingerprint Reader
Coding4Funs WebLog
In this installment of the "Some Assembly Required" column, Scott Hanselman creates a Family Fingerprint Manager using .NET 2.0 that interfaces with the Microsoft Fingerprint Reader and the GrFinger SDK
Filed under Design, Architecture | on 2007 Mar 06
Perhaps it is time to declare victory in the battle of Rules Engines vs. Dependency Injection
Inside Architecture
I watched on the sidelines, not long ago, as a team of architects carefully inspected and examined different technologies for managing a rules engine. I found it interesting, but not terribly pertinent
Filed under Object Oriented Concepts | on 2007 Mar 06
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