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Architecting Service Broker applications (part 2) This is the second in a series on architecting SQL Server 2005 Service Broker (SSB) applications. If you haven't read part 1 http blogs.msdn.com rogerwolterblog »
Some years ago there was a lot of fuzz about the importance of the W3C XHTML standard. I've always been a firm believer of the standards and built every website to comply with them. But why Very brief »
DataContractSerializer supports multiple serialization mechanisms. If more than one serialization mechanism is specified for the same type, which one gets used Experimentation is the easiest way to figure »
Now that we've released IE7 in English, I want to update everyone on our plans for other languages. The short version is that we will be releasing IE7 in all languages available for each version of Windows »
Tim Ewald's latest post points out the major problem we all face when designing serviceswe can't have everything we want! ! ! Tim presents the following three desires A flexible system that can evolve »
This is third in a series on the impact of the business operating model on Service Oriented Architecture. (see overview ) What can you get from this series My prior post raised a bit of ire with one of »
Overview Problem Presented A few weeks ago, I posted a blog similarly titled, Growing Number of Object Attributes in Relational Databases . In that blog, I described the problem of vertical data explosion »
I've talked to a few people recently about parameterized templates, and so I wanted to write some of it down. Here's the scenario I want to create an application that has a main window with several buttons »
Scrubyt For the past few months Peter Szinek has been giving me lots of tasty tidbits about his forthcoming ScRUBYt Web-scraping toolkit, and now it's finally fully released to the public! Peter describes »