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The main IP address: 104.31.69.68,Your server Singapore,Singapore ISP:CloudFlare Inc. TLD:uk CountryCode:SG
The description :toggle navigation i can't remember where i read it... home about contact categories tags home about contact categories tags top of page i can't remember where i read it... an online collection of post...
This report updates in 22-Jun-2018
Created Date: | 24-Feb-2000 |
Changed Date: | 15-Feb-2018 |
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toggle navigation i can't remember where i read it... home about contact categories tags home about contact categories tags top of page i can't remember where i read it... an online collection of post-it notes ddd south west 8 april 23rd, 2018 i attended ddd south west at the weekend in bristol. as usual, it was a great event. here are the sketchnotes i took of the talks i attended. outside-in tdd by ian russell website twitter give it a rest - tips for designing and consuming public apis by liam westley website twitter kubernetes for .net developers by shahid iqbal website twitter slides teaching an old dog new tricks by ismail mayat website twitter patterns and practices for building a better web api architecture by joseph woodward website twitter cambridge alexa devs meetup april 17th, 2018 i recently attended the inaugural meetup of the cambridge alexa developers group held at amazon’s cambridge office. the group was set up by bob harris and rich merrett , who both gave talks on building alexa skills and ssml. david low , amazon’s head of solutions architects, also gave a talk about how to best create a skill by working out its user value: one particlarly interesting thing covered was a formula for working out whether a skill will be a “killer skill”: cusomter value × contexts × frequency × multipliers complexity × friction the higher the output of this formula, the higher the likelihood that a skill will be succesful. while this talk wasn’t recorded, he has given a similar talk before that was. ndc london 2018 january 23rd, 2018 last week i attended ndc london . it’s not the first time that i’ve been, but it is the first time i’ve done the workshops that run alongside the main conference. i attended the “identity & access control for modern applications and apis using asp.net core 2” workshop hosted by dominick baier and brock allen . this was a two day workshop consisting of a mixture of presentation, discussion, and hands-on labs. it dived deep into the security aspects of modern asp.net applications, specifically the application itself and its apis. the first day focused on how external authentication (via oauth 2.0 and openid connect) could be used to save having to implement authentication yourself in your application. the second day took this further and focused on how to secure an api that you may have in an application so that you can call it server-to-server, from mobile applications, or from javascript applications. the remaining three days of the conference was in the form of talks. like i’ve done before , i sketchnoted many of the sessions that i attended. what is programming anyway? by felienne hermans website twitter video the power of technical decisions by jake ginnivan website twitter video you build it, you run it by chris o’dell website twitter video an introduction to kotlin by dmitry kandalov website twitter slides video composite uis: the microservices last mile by jimmy bogard website twitter slides video designing for speech by jessice engström website twitter video jewelbots: how to get more girls coding by jennifer wadella website twitter slides video who needs dashboards? by jessica white website twitter slides video pilot decision management by clifford agius twitter video a developer’s guide to machine learning by tess ferrandez-norlander website twitter slides video csp xxp sts pkp caa etc… by scott helme website twitter video web apps can’t do that, can they? by steve sanderson website twitter video these are the other talks i attended but didn’t sketchnote: c# 7.0 by jon skeet website twitter video c# 7.1 and 7.2: the releases you didn’t know you had by bill wagner website twitter video the psychology of social engineering by niall merrigan website twitter video the modern cloud by scott guthrie website twitter video the hello world show live hosted by heather downing and spencer schneidenbach website video tips and tricks with azure by scott guthrie website twitter video why i’m not leaving .net by mark rendle website twitter video ddd north 2017 october 16th, 2017 i recently attended ddd north 2017 in bradford. i’ve been wanting to take up sketchnoting for a while now, but have never gotten round to doing it, so when ian johnson (go check out his sketchnotes - they are great) prompted me to take my sketchbook and pens with me, i reluctantly obliged. i’m so glad i did though as i really enjoyed doing them, and i feel it had the effect of me being able to recall much more of the content of each talk. i tweeted the sketchnotes after each session and got a great response from both the speakers and attendees. here are the sketchnotes i did during the day. microservices: what i’ve learned after a year of building a system by nathan gloyn website twitter slides spot the difference: automating visual regression testing by viv richards website twitter slides married to the mob (programming) by derek graham website twitter slides how to parse a file by matt ellis website twitter slides alexa, open sneezaroo… by zinat wali twitter setting a culture for all threads in an application october 29th, 2013 if you do any kind of globalisation in your applications, you will probably already be familiar with the thread.currentculture and thread.currentuiculture properties that can be used to set a culture on the thread so that .net knows to load the correct resources and to format numbers and dates properly. a big downside to using approach this is that the culture is only set on the current thread, meaning that any new threads created will be using the default culture for the application (which is tied to the regional settings of the operation system). this wasn’t too much of a problem years ago when multi-threading was not used widely, but in modern application development it is virtually impossible to avoid using multiple threads (e.g. task parallel library), especially when trying to make use of modern multi-core hardware. you would have to manually set the culture when spawning new threads to ensure that the correct culture was being used - a real pain and a common cause of bugs. .net 4.5 comes to the rescue with the introduction of two new properties: cultureinfo . defaultthreadcurrentculture cultureinfo . defaultthreadcurrentuiculture a culture can be set using properties that will then be used for all threads in the whole application domain, meaning that you can set the correct culture at application start up and all threads will use that culture. by default, these properties are set to null meaning that the pre-4.5 behaviour will still hold and that the system culture will be used by default. the msdn docs for cultureinfo.defaultthreadcurrentculture and cultureinfo.defaultthreadcurrentuiculture provide more details. alternatives to .net reflector march 2nd, 2011 redgate recently announced that from the next version of reflector (v7), they will charge $35 for a licence. since the announcement a few weeks ago, there has been quite a backlash against the decision from the .net community, mainly because redgate have put a time-bomb in the currently-free version so that it will expire at the end of may 2011. in response to this announcement, several alternatives to reflector have surfaced - some free, some commercial. the list below outlines all of the alternatives, some of which have been around for many years. jetbrains resharper (commercial + free) within a day of the announcement, jetbrains put out a teaser suggesting that a decompiler was in the works. two weeks later, they announced that the next version of resharper will have an integrated decompiler akin to reflector, along with a free standalone version to be released later in the year. telerik justcode (commercial) just as jetbrains put out a teaser, telerik followed suit and showed a decompilation feature that will be in the next version of their justcode tool. ldasm (free) this tool comes bundled with the windows sdk tools (that get installed as part of visual
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/01/pilot-decision-management-clifford-agius.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/04/patterns-and-practices-for-building-a-better-web-api-architecture-joseph-woodward.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2017/10/alexa-open-sneezaroo-zinat-wali.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/01/jewelbots-how-to-get-more-girls-coding-jennifer-wadella.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/01/what-is-programming-anyway-felienne-hermans.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/04/working-backwards-david-low.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/about.html
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/01/who-needs-dashboards-jessica-white.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2017/10/how-to-parse-a-file-matt-ellis.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/fsharp/2010/09/20/fsharp-links.html
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/01/composite-uis-the-microservices-last-mile-jimmy-bogard.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/windows/2006/06/29/extracting-msi-files.html
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2017/10/microservices-what-ive-learned-after-a-year-of-building-a-system-nathan-gloyn.jpg#img-sketchnote
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/ndc-london/sketchnotes/2018/01/23/ndc-london.html
https://blog.adrianbanks.co.uk/assets/media/images/2018/04/give-it-a-rest-tips-for-designing-and-consuming-public-apis-liam-westley.jpg#img-sketchnote
designcoderelease.blogspot.co.uk
scotthelme.co.uk
codeblog.jonskeet.uk
jesswhite.co.uk
josephwoodward.co.uk
dddnorth.co.uk
blog.liamwestley.co.uk
vivrichards.co.uk
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adrianbanks.co.uk
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Registrar:
123-Reg Limited t/a 123-reg [Tag = 123-REG]
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Last updated: 15-Feb-2018
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