Bryant's Injury Caps a Three-Fall (Los Angeles Times)
Grok Headline matches for Bryant's Injury Caps a Three-Fall (Los Angeles Times)
Bryant's Initial Interview With
Detectives Revealed (Los Angeles Times)
Bryant's Initial Interview With
Detectives Revealed (Los Angeles Times)
09/17/2004 04:53 AMLos Angeles Times - After initially denying he had sex with the woman
accusing him of rape, Kobe Bryant told detectives a day later that
there had been a consensual encounter and that he stopped intercourse
when the woman said "no," according to a police document made public
Thursday.
Oil Prices Fall Again on a Pledge (Los
Angeles Times)
Oil Prices Fall Again on a Pledge (Los
Angeles Times)
06/04/2004 05:47 AMLos Angeles Times - BEIRUT — OPEC on Thursday raised production
quotas and pledged to make further increases to rein in the cost of
crude, causing oil futures prices to fall for the second day in a row.
Bryant's Fall Is an Example of How to Be
Unlike Mike
Bryant's Fall Is an Example of How to Be
Unlike Mike
12/25/2004 05:17 PMLOS ANGELES.
A Steep Fall Into Gang Life (Los Angeles
Times)
A Steep Fall Into Gang Life (Los Angeles
Times)
08/05/2004 05:30 AMLos Angeles Times - At 16, he was a top student, star athlete and
police Explorer.
Heady U.S. Goals for Iraq Fall by
Wayside (Los Angeles Times)
Heady U.S. Goals for Iraq Fall by
Wayside (Los Angeles Times)
09/27/2004 05:30 AMLos Angeles Times - WASHINGTON — Despite continuing violence and
instability, President Bush has stuck doggedly to his central message
on Iraq: There is no need to change course because the
administration's plan for planting democracy in the Middle East is
working.
Baby Survives 30-Foot Fall Without
Injury (AP)
Baby Survives 30-Foot Fall Without
Injury (AP)
08/05/2004 07:21 PMAP - It could be seen as a lucky landing, but the father of 2-year-old
girl who fell 30 feet from a Santa Fe hotel window without major
injury said his daughter was saved by a miracle from God.
Sharp fall in hospital wait times
Sharp fall in hospital wait times
03/30/2005 07:11 AMNew figures show NHS waiting times in Wales have fallen sharply across
many areas in the last month.
We Eat; Therefore, They Are (Los Angeles
Times)
We Eat; Therefore, They Are (Los Angeles
Times)
08/10/2004 05:24 AMLos Angeles Times - BETHESDA, Md. — Inside a packed ballroom at
the local Holiday Inn, 13 government-appointed scientists sat regally
around a table, debating servings of fish.
They're Off! (To the Gym) (Los Angeles
Times)
They're Off! (To the Gym) (Los Angeles
Times)
05/25/2004 05:16 AMLos Angeles Times - VERSAILLES, Ky. — Just days after
arthroscopic surgery to remove bone chips from an inflamed ankle, the
athlete was back in training, huffing hard as he jogged on an
underwater treadmill.
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
12/30/2003 02:57 PMjob creation .. reports .. my
life
story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=2026&e=4&u=/latimes_ts
/20031229/ts_latimes/joblesscountskipsmillions
track this
site | 5 links
Fat, and Happy About It (Los Angeles
Times)
Fat, and Happy About It (Los Angeles
Times)
02/19/2004 06:41 AMLos Angeles Times - The newspaper ad inviting fat people to learn
about El Camino Hospital's new weight-loss surgery program held out
the opportunity to be not just a thinner person, but a better one.
Bluesman's Son Gets His Due (Los Angeles
Times)
Bluesman's Son Gets His Due (Los Angeles
Times)
06/02/2004 05:30 AMLos Angeles Times - CRYSTAL SPRINGS, Miss. — Inside the pink
brick estate he built with a blues fortune, 72-year-old Claud Johnson
cannot shake the habits he formed when he was a poor man.
Cranking It Up (Los Angeles Times)
Cranking It Up (Los Angeles Times)
05/31/2004 05:38 AMLos Angeles Times - On a Sunday they'd hoped not to work, the Lakers
reported to their El Segundo practice facility and faced more of a
Western Conference finals they'd hoped not to prolong.
Here, It's Ladies' Day Every Day (Los
Angeles Times)
Here, It's Ladies' Day Every Day (Los
Angeles Times)
06/12/2004 04:43 AMLos Angeles Times - RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — There is no heavenly
sentry outside the Ladies' Kingdom, only a listless pair of khaki-clad
policemen ready to run off any errant men. The women make their way
past the gatekeepers, disappear behind frosted glass and step into a
shopping center all their own.
Far From Ready for More War (Los Angeles
Times)
Far From Ready for More War (Los Angeles
Times)
05/15/2004 05:51 AMLos Angeles Times - FT. CAMPBELL, Ky. — From their first days as
"Screaming Eagles," the 18,000 soldiers of the Army's 101st Airborne
Division are taught to be ready for anything. As the force's proud
creed goes: "First in, last out."
More Than One Can Conceive (Los Angeles
Times)
More Than One Can Conceive (Los Angeles
Times)
12/30/2004 06:51 AMLos Angeles Times - CLEVELAND — The elephant dung was no trouble
at all. When the circus came to town, Percy Skuy simply showed up with
a bucket and politely asked the keeper if he could collect a few
droppings.
An Icon, and Then He's Gone (Los Angeles
Times)
An Icon, and Then He's Gone (Los Angeles
Times)
06/04/2004 05:47 AMLos Angeles Times - BEIJING — For many foreigners, he is
Tiananmen Square's most recognizable figure, outshining even Chairman
Mao Tse-tung — whose body still lies in state at a far end of
the vast public space.
The Los Angeles Times goes multimedia
The Los Angeles Times goes multimedia
03/21/2003 12:14 AM The Los Angeles Times goes
multimedia. For the past few weeks, the LA Times has begun a
significant push into offering video, audio, and interactive Flash on
their website. One of the most interesting aspects is that the paper
has moved one step beyond simply replaying AP Television clips as many
sites have done; the LA Times writers are stand before the cameras and
microphones themselves and report stories in a stuttering,
non-hairsprayed, introverted demeanor that I find very refreshing,
though so far I have gleaned very little additional information from
it. When does (or can) this mode of journalism on the web rise above
gimmickry or 'just because we can' and add value to a written article?
Can video/tv news rise above mere spectacle?
It Seems Everybody Has an Opinion About
Her (Los Angeles Times)
It Seems Everybody Has an Opinion About
Her (Los Angeles Times)
08/01/2004 05:16 AMLos Angeles Times - BOSTON — Teresa Heinz Kerry is a political
wife unlike any this country has seen. But can she affect an election?
Some think it's possible.
They May Protest Too Much (Los Angeles
Times)
They May Protest Too Much (Los Angeles
Times)
05/24/2004 07:52 AMLos Angeles Times - MEXICO CITY — Shakespeare warned about the
ides of March, and T.S. Eliot dubbed April the cruelest month. But
they never lived in Mexico City, where May delivers a special kind of
misery.
Olé? No Way, Say Chinese (Los
Angeles Times)
Olé? No Way, Say Chinese (Los
Angeles Times)
05/11/2004 05:02 AMLos Angeles Times - BEIJING — "Foreign Bulls Head for the Middle
Kingdom."
Age Before Duty (Los Angeles Times)
Age Before Duty (Los Angeles Times)
06/08/2004 06:12 AMLos Angeles Times - SACRAMENTO — This is the age of
revolving-door democracy in California. It's the era of term limits
and recalls and contempt for the Legislature, a time when an erstwhile
action movie star can run the nation's largest state government and a
freshman lawmaker can rule the Assembly.
Going Away for the Gold (Los Angeles
Times)
Going Away for the Gold (Los Angeles
Times)
08/11/2004 04:42 AMLos Angeles Times - It is a quintessential Olympic moment, hundreds of
athletes marching into the stadium, drenching the field in the banners
and colors of their nations. But when the 2004 Summer Games in Athens
begin with this traditional opening ceremony, take a closer look.
Los Angeles Times - Registration
Los Angeles Times - Registration
12/02/2003 12:28 AMChina Sees End of an Era (Los Angeles
Times)
China Sees End of an Era (Los Angeles
Times)
09/20/2004 04:50 AMLos Angeles Times - BEIJING — More than a year after becoming
China's president, Hu Jintao was handed the full reins of power Sunday
when his predecessor, Jiang Zemin, gave up the nation's most powerful
military post.
This Family Was Really Messed Up (Los
Angeles Times)
This Family Was Really Messed Up (Los
Angeles Times)
06/15/2004 05:07 AMLos Angeles Times - Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Michael Eisner had
come to the resort town of Sun Valley, Idaho, with his company's
wallet wide open — a risky move at a gathering of voracious
moguls.
They've Outlived the Stigma (Los Angeles
Times)
They've Outlived the Stigma (Los Angeles
Times)
09/25/2004 05:53 AMLos Angeles Times - CHIRAN, Japan — These are the dusky days of
old age that kamikaze pilots like Shigeyoshi Hamazono were not
supposed to see.
Sea Lion Surfaces Far From Sea (Los
Angeles Times)
Sea Lion Surfaces Far From Sea (Los
Angeles Times)
02/10/2004 06:52 AMLos Angeles Times - California Highway Patrol officers cruising the
dusty inland farm roads of the San Joaquin Valley deal with a lot
— speeders, drunk drivers, fleeing felons. On Monday morning,
they dealt with a 350-pound sea lion.
LAPD's Top Gun Is on the Case (Los
Angeles Times)
LAPD's Top Gun Is on the Case (Los
Angeles Times)
05/05/2004 05:25 AMLos Angeles Times - Maybe it's farsightedness — the ability of
Richard Smith to read freeway signs before anyone else in the car. Or
maybe it's his high tolerance for boredom.
More U.S. Forces Are Called Up (Los
Angeles Times)
More U.S. Forces Are Called Up (Los
Angeles Times)
05/05/2004 08:19 AMLos Angeles Times - WASHINGTON — Abandoning plans to scale back
the U.S. force in Iraq, the Pentagon on Tuesday announced that it
would send 20,000 additional troops there earlier than expected and
keep the military at its post-invasion peak of 135,000 through the end
of 2005.
Equal Right to Fight (Los Angeles Times)
Equal Right to Fight (Los Angeles Times)
04/10/2004 05:07 AMLos Angeles Times - CARLISLE, Pa. — Kimberly Fahnestock Voelz is
buried near the church where she was baptized, a few miles across
fallow farm fields from the stables where she raised quarter horses as
a teenager. Next door is the yellow frame house she left one day in
1996 and, without telling her parents, joined the Army.
Reveling in Their Rejection (Los Angeles
Times)
Reveling in Their Rejection (Los Angeles
Times)
02/01/2005 08:28 PMLos Angeles Times - NEW YORK — Chances are you don't remember a
cartoon recently sent to the New Yorker magazine, where a patriarchal
grandfather thunders at small children gathered around him: "I came to
this country with nothing but the hair on my back!"
Politics a hot read (Los Angeles Times)
Politics a hot read (Los Angeles Times)
04/10/2004 05:07 AMLos Angeles Times - Former Wall Street Journal reporter Ron Suskind
figured his book — ex-Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill's
biting insider account of the Bush administration — might get a
little attention. But that was before "The Price of Loyalty" (Simon
& Schuster) blow-torched its way to the top of bestseller lists.
Another Shoe Drops at CIA (Los Angeles
Times)
Another Shoe Drops at CIA (Los Angeles
Times)
12/29/2004 06:12 AMLos Angeles Times - WASHINGTON — The head of the CIA's analytic
division told her staff Tuesday that she was resigning, becoming the
latest high-level departure in an ongoing shake-up of the agency's
senior ranks by new director Porter J. Goss.
Going to War Not Worth It, More Voters
Say (Los Angeles Times)
Going to War Not Worth It, More Voters
Say (Los Angeles Times)
06/11/2004 05:03 AMLos Angeles Times - WASHINGTON — Most U.S. voters now say it was
not worth going to war in Iraq, but an overwhelming majority reject
the idea of setting a deadline to withdraw all U.S. forces from the
country, according to a Times poll.
Soothing the Souls at Last (Los Angeles
Times)
Soothing the Souls at Last (Los Angeles
Times)
02/10/2004 06:52 AMLos Angeles Times - EADS, Colo. — Silence and emptiness abound
on this great sea of grass stretching to the pale blue horizon.
Tumbleweeds spin past, hawks gaze from rusted fence posts.
Gandhi Won't Be Premier (Los Angeles
Times)
Gandhi Won't Be Premier (Los Angeles
Times)
05/19/2004 04:44 AMLos Angeles Times - NEW DELHI — Hounded by Hindu nationalists,
and apparently fearing for her safety, Italian-born Sonia Gandhi
shocked her adopted nation Tuesday by announcing she would not become
India's next prime minister.
Ex-Detainees Sue 2 U.S. Contractors (Los
Angeles Times)
Ex-Detainees Sue 2 U.S. Contractors (Los
Angeles Times)
06/10/2004 04:39 AMLos Angeles Times - WASHINGTON — Eight Iraqis filed a federal
lawsuit Wednesday claiming that employees of two American contractors
subjected them to abuse in U.S.-run prisons in Iraq, including
electric shocks, rape, and torture.
One Year Later:Where Is Iraq? (Los
Angeles Times)
One Year Later:Where Is Iraq? (Los
Angeles Times)
04/09/2004 04:00 PMLos Angeles Times - John Daniszewski was in Baghdad throughout the war
and has continued reporting there during the U.S. occupation. This is
his impression of the conflict's aftermath.
Grok Description matches for Bryant's Injury Caps a Three-Fall (Los Angeles Times)
GrokA matches for Bryant's Injury Caps a Three-Fall (Los Angeles Times)
CamelBones
CamelBones
04/01/2005 07:03 AMCamelBones 1.0.0-beta1 Released
CamelBones 0.2.3
CamelBones 0.2.3
04/26/2004 11:42 AMA Cocoa/Perl bridge for Mac OS X.
CamelBones - What’s New in
1.0.0-beta1
CamelBones - What’s New in
1.0.0-beta1
04/04/2005 01:47 PMCamelBones
1.0.0b1: “This new approach is a huge improvement over the
old proxy-based bridge, and makes a number of things possible with
this new version that could not be done previously: Support for Cocoa
Bindings, NSDocument-based applications, Custom NSView
subclasses.”
Israel Suspends Purchase of Microsoft
Software
Israel Suspends Purchase of Microsoft
Software
01/12/2004 12:48 AMIsrael National News Jan 11 2004 11:25PM ET
BestNet Communications Corp. Does Not
Proceed with Proposed Stock Purchase and
Asset Purchase & Management Agreements
with Pacific Biometrics, Inc.
BestNet Communications Corp. Does Not
Proceed with Proposed Stock Purchase and
Asset Purchase & Management Agreements
with Pacific Biometrics, Inc.
03/14/2005 05:07 PMBestNet Communications Corp. (BestNet, OTCBB: BESC) today announced
that the Board of Directors have determined not to proceed with the
proposed agreement with Pacific Biometrics, Inc that was described in
BestNet’s press release of January 4, 2005. [PRWEB Feb 28, 2005]
ATTRIBUTES CONTEXT MENU (free): Adds a
context menu to all files and folders to
quickly modify their system attributes
ATTRIBUTES CONTEXT MENU (free): Adds a
context menu to all files and folders to
quickly modify their system attributes
10/28/2003 11:06 PMImplementing XHTML 2.0
Implementing XHTML 2.0
07/27/2004 08:02 PMWell, I slept off most of my desire to blog about XHTML 2.0, but
here's a post anyway. The thing is, I don't think implementing
elements using behaviors is really a good idea, although I feel bad
saying it while the W3C is linking to my test implementation. ?
Implementing CSS (Part 1)
Implementing CSS (Part 1)
06/05/2005 11:17 PMOne of the most interesting problems (to me at least) in browser
layout engines is how to implement a style system that can determine
the style information for elements on a page efficiently. I worked on
this extensively in the Gecko layout engine during my time at AOL and
I've also done a lot of work on it for WebCore at Apple. My ideal
implementation would actually be a hybrid of the two systems, since
some of the optimizations I've done exist only in one engine or the
other.
When dealing with style information like font size or text color,
you have both the concept of back end information, what was specified
in the style rule, and the concept of front end information, the
computed result that you'll actually use when rendering. The
interesting problem is how to compute this front end information for a
given element efficiently.
Back end information can be specified in two different ways. It
can either be specified using CSS syntax, whether in a stylesheet or
in an inline style attribute on the element itself, or it is
implicitly present because another attribute on the element specified
presentational information. An example of such an attribute would be
the color attribute on the font tag. Both WebCore and
Gecko use the term mapped attribute to describe an attribute
whose value (or even mere presence) maps to some implicit style
declaration.
A rule in CSS consists of two pieces. There is the
selector, that bit of information that says under what
conditions the rule should match a given element, and there is the
declaration, a list of property/value pairs that should be
applied to the element should the selector be matched.
All back end information can ultimately be thought of as supplying
a declaration. A normal rule in a stylesheet that is matched has the
declaration specified as part of the rule. An inline style attribute
on an element has no selector and is simply a declaration that always
applies to that element. Similarly each individual mapped attribute
(like the color and face attributes on the font
tag) can be thought of as supplying a declaration as well.
Therefore the process of computing the style information for an
element can be broken down into two phases. The first phase is to
determine what set of declarations apply to an element. Once that
back end information has been determined, the second phase is to take
that back end information and quickly determine the information that
should be used when rendering.
WebCore (in upcoming Safari releases) has a really cool
optimization that I came up with to avoid even having to compute the
set of declarations that apply to an element. This optimization in
practice results in not even having to match style for about 60% of
the elements on your page.
The idea behind the optimization is to recognize when two elements
in a page are going to have the same style through DOM (and other
state) inspection and to simply share the front end style information
between those two elements whenever possible.
There are a number of conditions that must be met in order for this
sharing to be possible:
(1) The elements must be in the same mouse state (e.g., one can't be
in :hover while the other isn't)
(2) Neither element should have an id
(3) The tag names should match
(4) The class attributes should match
(5) The set of mapped attributes must be identical
(6) The link states must match
(7) The focus states must match
(8) Neither element should be affected by attribute selectors, where
affected is defined as having any selector match that uses an
attribute selector in any position within the selector at all
(9) There must be no inline style attribute on the elements
(10) There must be no sibling selectors in use at all. WebCore simply
throws a global switch when any sibling selector is encountered and
disables style sharing for the entire document when they are present.
This includes the + selector and selectors like :first-child and
:last-child.
The algorithm to locate a shared style then goes something like
this. You walk through your previous siblings and for each one see if
the above 10 conditions are met. If you find a match, then simply
share your style information with the other element. Such a system
obviously assumes a reference counting model for your front end style
information.
Where this optimization kicks into high gear, however, is that it
doesn't have to give up if no siblings can be located. Because the
detection of identical style contexts is essentially O(1), nothing
more than a straight pointer comparison, you can easily look for
cousins of your element and still share style with those
elements.
The way this works is that if you can't locate a sibling, you can
go up to a parent element and attempt to find a sibling or cousin of
the parent element that has the same style pointer. If you find such
an element, you can then drill back down into its children and attempt
to find a match.
This means that for HTML like the following:
<table>
<tr class='row'>
<td class='cell' width=300 nowrap>Cell One</td>
</tr>
<tr class='row'>
<td class='cell' width=300 nowrap>Cell Two</td>
</tr>
In the above example, not only do the two rows share the same style
information, but the two cells do as well. This optimization works
extremely well for both old-school HTML (in which many deprecated
presentational tags are used) and newer HTML (in which class
attributes might figure more prominently).
Once the engine determines that a style can't be shared, i.e., that
no pre-existing front end style pointer is available, then it's time
to figure out the set of declarations that match a given element. It
is obvious that for inline style attributes and mapped attributes that
you can find the corresponding declaration quickly. The inline style
declaration can be owned by the element, and the mapped attributes can
be kept in a document-level hash. WebCore has a bit of an edge over
Gecko here in that it treats each individual mapped attribute on an
element as a separate declaration, whereas Gecko hashes all of the
mapped attributes on an element as a single "rule." This means that
Gecko will not be able to share the mapped attribute declaration for
the following two elements:
<img width=300 border=0>
<img width=500 border=0>
WebCore creates three unique declarations and hashes them, one for
a width of 300, one for a width of 500, and one for a border of 0.
Gecko creates two different "rules," one for (width=300,border=0) and
another for (width=500,border=0). As you can see in such a system,
you will frequently not be able to treat the identical border
attributes as the same.
Aside from this difference in mapped attribute handling, the two
engines employ a similar optimization for quickly determining matching
stylesheet rules called rule filtering. All rules that are
potentially matchable by any element (i.e., that have the correct
media type) are hashed based on the contents of the rightmost simple
selector in the rule.
A selector in CSS can be either simple (meaning that all of the
contents of that selector apply only to a single element) or compound
(meaning that you may examine multiple elements like parents or
siblings of that element). A compound selector is essentially a chain
of simple selectors, so the following rule:
tr > td { color: blue }
has two simple selectors, tr and td. The
rightmost simple selector in the rule is the one that we will use for
the rule filtering optimization.
The rightmost simple selector falls into four categories.
(1) The selector uses an ID. (Example: #foo)
(2) The selector doesn't have an ID but uses a class. (Example:
.foo)
(3) The selector has no class or ID but specifies a tag name.
(Example: div)
(4) The selector specifies none of these things. (Example:
*[disabled])
The rule is placed into one of four hashtables depending on which
category it falls into. The idea behind these categorizations is to
always filter out more specific information first. For example, if an
element has a specific ID, then obviously any rules whose rightmost
selector uses a different ID cannot match. Technically the last
category can just be a list and not a hashtable, since those rules
must always be examined by all elements.
Each hashtable, therefore, consists of a mapping from a given
atomic string to a set of rules that match. The class attribute is
exceptional in that you must put the rule into the hashtable multiple
times if multiple class attributes are used.
When determining the set of rules that match a given element, you
only examine rules that correspond to the correct hash entry based off
your ID, classes and tag name. This optimization basically eliminates
95+% of the rules up front so that they need not even be considered
during the matching process.
Each rule is then examined in detail, with all selectors being
checked, to determine if it is a match, and the set of matches is
collected. The set of matches can then be sorted by priority and
specificity such that all the declarations are in the proper
application order.
This brings us to the final phase of the style computation, which
is taking the set of matches and quickly computing the appropriate
front end style information. It is here that Gecko really shines.
What I implemented in Gecko was a data structure called the rule
tree for efficient storing of cached style information that can be
shared *even when* two elements are not necessarily the same.
The idea behind the rule tree is as follows. You can think of the
universe of possible rules in your document as an alphabet and the set
of rules that are matched by an element as a given input word. For
example, imagine that you had 26 rules in a stylesheet and you labeled
them A-Z. One element might match three rules in the sheet, thus
forming the input word "C-A-T" or another might form the input word
"D-O-G."
There are several important observations one can make once you
formulate the problem this way. The first is that words that are
prefixes of a larger word will end up applying the same set of rules.
All additional letters in the word do is result in the application of
more declarations. Thus the rule tree is effectively a lexicographic
tree of nodes, with each node in a tree being created lazily as you
walk the tree spelling out a given word.
This system allows you to cache style information at each node in
the tree. This means that once you've looked up the word
"C-A-T-E-R-W-A-U-L", and cached information at all of the nodes, then
looking up the word "C-A-T" becomes more efficient.
In order to make the caching efficient, properties can be grouped
into categories, with the primary criterion for categorization being
whether the property inherits by default. It's also important to
group properties together that would logically be specified together,
so that when a fault occurs and you have to make a copy of a given
struct, you do so knowing that the other values in the struct were
probably going to be different anyway.
Once you have the properties grouped into categories like the
border struct or the background struct, then you can either store
these structs in the rule tree or as part of a style tree that more or
less matches the structure of the document. Inheritance has to apply
down the style tree and tends to force a fault, whereas non-inherited
properties can usually be cached in the rule tree for easy access.
WebCore doesn't contain a rule tree, but it is smart enough to
refcount the structs and share them as long as no properties have been
set in the struct. In practice this works pretty well but is not as
ideal as the rule tree solution.
Implementing Flood Control
Implementing Flood Control
12/19/2004 03:27 PMIf the load of application relies on incoming events, you may
eventually face the happy curse of popularity: too much work to do
with your available resources. If you set a limit on how many events
you can process within a time period, you can avoid the flood. Vladi
Belperchinov-Shabanski explains the algorithm and demonstrates working
code.
Implementing An ADO Data Control With
VB6
Implementing An ADO Data Control With
VB6
06/18/2002 10:19 AMThe ADO data control can save Visual Basic developers hours of time.
In this article Susan shows us exactly how to go about implementing an
ADO control. 5 Free Bonuses!!! "Attention All Web Developers" Now
includes 5 FREE eBooks to help you promote your ConMan website! "This
is one of the best pieces of software that we have ever used. It's
quick, streamlined, and allowed us to have a fully working site packed
with articles in just 3 hours" Ever wanted to run your own content
driven web site? Well now you can with ConMan: the fast, flexible and
secure web site + admin suite. Try it for free!Click here. Get
notified when we post new content: New Forum Threads 1. How do i do
this? 2. C# editor of your choice? 3. Article Added Date 4. ASP
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editor to work properly 8. New website & advice 9. mysql tables 10.
Article Type More Forum Threads... Other Recent Articles An
Introduction To The Bulk Copy Utility // by Mitchell Harper - 12th Jun
2002
Implementing filesystems in Python
Implementing filesystems in Python
12/10/2003 06:35 PMLUFS-Python
provides a relatively simple API for implementing new Linux filesystems in
pure Python. You install the package, write a class implementing
methods for handling filesystem operations such as creating a
directory, opening/reading/writing/closing a file, creating symlinks
etc and finally mount your new filesystem with some special arguments
to the mount command.
At first glance, this is a bit of a gimmick - why would you want to
write your own filesystem in the first place? We've been talking about
this at work and came up with a few ideas. How about a filesystem
where HTML files
saved in a certain directory were instantly run through HTMLTidy and converted in to
valid XHTML ? Or a custom network filesystem that saves
files on a remote server using GnuPG to encrypt them before transfer?
How about a read-only filesystem that lets you browse the contents of
a MySQL database? Just imagine being able to use tools such as
grep and find to search your database. A
module that maps someone elses public web server to your own
filesystem, making mirroring as easy as running a recursive
cp command. A filesystem that updates a swish-e full-text index every time a
file is saved to it - years before Microsoft release Longhorn. The
possibilities are endless.
Here's a really fun idea: a filesystem that implements a dynamic
website. Instead of using tools like mod_python to dynamically create
pages, implement a filesystem that dynamically creates HTML files as they are
requested and set up a stock Apache install with the dynamic
filesystem as the document root. Then point ProFTPD at it so you can log in
via FTP and mess
with your content dynamically. We're thinking about bulding an
FTP interface to our
new database driven CMS, but we could just build a filesystem interface
and point our FTP
server straight at it.
I'm sure there are performance and stability issues that make most
of the above more trouble than it's worth, but I think you'll agree
it's a pretty exciting technology.
"Code snippets for implementing tags
with SQL"
"Code snippets for implementing tags
with SQL"
04/11/2005 11:43 PMPoll Position: Implementing Identity
Poll Position: Implementing Identity
04/04/2005 06:03 AMQ: How do you best build a brand?
Implementing Linux emulation on NetBSD
Implementing Linux emulation on NetBSD
05/13/2004 03:28 AMNetBSD's Linux emulation doesn't run a Linux kernel on a virtual
machine; it runs Linux binaries on a NetBSD kernel. Linux emulation
let you run plenty of useful programs that won't run natively under
NetBSD, such as Sun's 1.4 Java Runtime Environment and JDK.
Hands On: Implementing OS X 10.3
(Panther) Server
Hands On: Implementing OS X 10.3
(Panther) Server
02/10/2004 02:43 AMI can tell you now that everything Apple promised is indeed in there
-- and it works! By Yuval Kossovsky (Computerworld via MyAppleMenu)
Implementing a relational database using
MySQL
Implementing a relational database using
MySQL
04/06/2005 12:17 PMWhen properly implemented, a relational database can greatly enhance
the availability of data and information for an enterprise's decision
makers. However, deploying a relational database on almost any scale
requires a thorough understanding of the fundamental concepts and
rules that govern their behavior.
Implementing client-side code for SSL in
JDK 1.3
Implementing client-side code for SSL in
JDK 1.3
01/23/2003 02:47 AMCNET Jan 23 2003 1:24AM ET
Implementing XPath for wireless devices
(XML.org)
Implementing XPath for wireless devices
(XML.org)
06/07/2002 08:34 AMImplementing XPath for Wireless Devices
Implementing XPath for Wireless Devices
06/06/2002 05:37 PMIn the first of a two-part series, we explore the implementation of
XPath on wireless devices using the WAP family of standards.
Gov't could raise P20B by implementing
IP law
Gov't could raise P20B by implementing
IP law
09/14/2004 04:18 PMSun Star Network Sep 14 2004 7:26PM GMT
ICANN To Begin Implementing IPv6
ICANN To Begin Implementing IPv6
07/22/2004 02:58 PMWebProNews Jul 22 2004 6:18PM GMT
Being User-Centered When Implementing a
UCD Process
Being User-Centered When Implementing a
UCD Process
09/09/2002 06:29 AMImplementing successful shared services
in government
Implementing successful shared services
in government
02/17/2004 10:26 PMComputer Weekly Feb 18 2004 2:09AM GMT
C++: Implementing Design by Contract to
reduce bugs
C++: Implementing Design by Contract to
reduce bugs
08/16/2004 03:06 AMCNET Aug 16 2004 7:13AM GMT
Software Developer resist implementing
Atom
Software Developer resist implementing
Atom
05/24/2004 07:44 AMNot all developers who are designing RSS applications are adding
Atom support and I can't say that I blame them but it is interesting
to see their comments. [miseldine.com]
Scilly Isles looks at implementing
e-government across 5 islands
Scilly Isles looks at implementing
e-government across 5 islands
04/16/2005 02:13 AMPublicTechnology.net Apr 16 2005 4:16AM GMT
Implementing XPath for wireless devices,
part II (XML.com)
Implementing XPath for wireless devices,
part II (XML.com)
07/18/2002 07:34 PMImplementing XPath for Wireless Devices,
Part II
Implementing XPath for Wireless Devices,
Part II
07/17/2002 07:16 PMIn the second of a two-part series, we explore the implementation of
XPath on wireless devices using the WAP family of standards.
Features: Implementing REST Web
Services: Best Practices and Guidelines
Features: Implementing REST Web
Services: Best Practices and Guidelines
08/11/2004 07:03 PMHao He offers guidelines and best practices for implementing REST web
services.
Enterprise Java Beans - Part 2,
Implementing Your First EJBs
Enterprise Java Beans - Part 2,
Implementing Your First EJBs
11/14/2003 03:33 AMWebmasterBase Nov 14 2003 2:36AM ET
Bryant's Injury Caps a Three-Fall (Los Angeles Times)