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Developing for the Web with Ant, Part 2
In this second installment of a two-part excerpt from Ant: The Definitive Guide, 2nd Edition, Steve Holzner covers the tasks for deploying web apps with XML Tourist
Ferreting Out Near-Identical Records in Access
Working with lists of contacts is a common database activity, but as a list grows, so do the chances for duplicate records. Ken Bluttman shows one technique for ferreting out these near-identical records in Access using the A Closer Look at Spotlight Spotlight integration with Tiger and its apps tilts the scales back toward Safari, Address Book, iCal, and Mail for your core applications. Matthew Russell shows you how this intelligent technology enables you to find just about anything, anywhere, regardless of where you are at that moment. [MacDevCenter.com] Some Useful Scripts from Readers Readers often offer the best advice for nagging problems. In this article, Mitch Tulloch, author of Windows Server Hacks, shares reader scripts for remotely enabling Remote Desktop, and controlling a default printer in a roaming profile. [WindowsDevCenter.com] E3 2005: War of the Consoles ... Almost E3 is the world's largest video game trade show, which means a lot of networking and deal brokering. However, E3 is also the first chance for the average gamer to get a sneak peek at the video games in development. In a hardcore gamer's world, the flashy and elaborate E3 exhibits are tantamount to a springtime Christmas morning. Stephen Cawood offers this report on E3 2005. [O'Reilly Network] Building Web Parts, Part 1 Web sites today contain a wealth of information; so much that a poorly designed site can easily overwhelm users. To better help users cope, portal web sites today (such as MSN) often organize their data into discrete units that support a degree of personalization. In this first of three articles, Wei-Meng Lee discusses how to use Web Parts for user customization in your ASP.NET 2.0 web sites. [ONDotnet.com] Mapping the 802.11 Protocol A trip to London and a bit of unique inspiration gave Matt Gast the ideas that would lead to the first draft of a visual map describing the relationship between the various components of the 802.11 standard and related security standards. Matt details the road he took to the final version of his 802.11 protocol map. Matt is the author of 802.11: The Definitive Guide, 2nd Edition. [Wireless DevCenter] An Introduction to Tiger Terminal Now that you've had a chance to enjoy all of the GUI goodies in Mac OS X 10.4, you might be ready to check out what's happening with the Terminal app. This article will introduces you to Tiger's Terminal app and CLI (command-line interface). [O'Reilly Network] Security Alerts A Simpler Ajax Path After years of hacks, tricks, and workarounds, there's finally a cross-browser, cross-platform way to communicate between client and server in web applications. Matthew Eernisse demonstrates how to send and receive structured data with XMLHttpRequest and shows off some tricks to make debugging and error handling easier. [ONLamp.com] Build a Wireless Gateway with Perl Tired of programming and want to tackle some system administration? How about using Perl to manage the wireless gateway you've always meant to set up? Alptekin Cakircali shows off his AWLP project, which combines Linux and Perl to make a customizable wireless gateway out of an old PC. [Perl.com] OpenBSD 3.7: The Wizard of OS
Has it been six months already? OpenBSD 3.7 is ready to go as you read this. Federico Biancuzzi discusses the release with several core developers, touching on subjects such as Wi-Fi support, improved package tools, and the shipped versions of popular projects including Apache Hacking the Linux Desktop Modifying stuff to suit individual desire is the credo of hackers everywhere. These two excerpts from Linux Desktop Hacks let you modify Linux to suit your desires: The first hack uses Virtual Network Computer (VNC) to access Windows and Mac OS X from your Linux desktop. The second shows how to lock down KDE with Kiosk mode, allowing you to control exactly what users can and can't change. [LinuxDevCenter.com] This Week in Perl 6, May 3, 2005 - May 17, 2005 Matt Fowles summarizes the Perl 6 mailing lists with Pugs gaining object support, Parrot 0.2.0 released, and Perl 6 going through a reduction (though not in volume). [Perl.com] Wire Hibernate Transactions in Spring The proper handling of transactions across multiple data stores, supporting multiple application flows, is the kind of heavy lifting J2EE servers were built for. But what if you're using the lighter-weight Spring framework? Binildas C. A. shows how you can wire Spring and Hibernate together to achieve the transaction support you desire. [ONJava.com] Review: Olympus DS-2 Stereo Voice Recorder The world is filled with amazing sounds and ideas. Here's a pocket-size gadget that lets you capture them covertly--in full 44.1kHz digital stereo. It's a thumb drive, too. [DigitalMedia.oreilly.com] Python and XML Consumer Camera Time-Lapse Movies Pocket digicams are great for still photos, and some of them even record quality video. But you can push the envelope even further with these devices, such as by creating time-lapse movies. Here's how two photo novices created their first production. [DigitalMedia.oreilly.com] Developing for the Web with Ant, Part 1
Developing for the Web is bread and butter for Ant developers. In part one of this two-part excerpt from Ant: The Definitive Guide, 2nd Edition, author Steve Holzner covers the tasks specifically designed for packaging web applications, including Rich Salz How to Boost XP Performance PC feeling a bit sluggish? It's not tough to juice up its performance. Mitch Tulloch, author of Windows Server Hacks, shows you how to do it in a few easy steps. [WindowsDevCenter.com] Tiger's Powerful Migration Assistant Transferring data, prefs, and apps from old Macs to new ones can be painful when upgrading computers. Fortunately, Apple's Migration Assistant has the brains and brawn to save users and system administrators alike much time during this process. Here's everything you'd want to know about this great tool. [O'Reilly Network] Which Is the Best Desktop Search Tool? There are plenty of desktop search tools out there--but which one is the best? Jake Ludington puts Google Desktop Search, Windows Desktop Search, and Copernic Desktop Search through their paces, and tells you his top choice. [WindowsDevCenter.com] |
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Tit for Tat: Apple vs. Yahoo! Betting Pools Number of books sold vs. published Any Mobile Carriers Out There? Top Ten Reasons Episode IV is Better Than Episode III The Flo(w) Awards: Honoring Technology That Supports Flow [Spencer Critchley] Washington Mutual works with FireFox now [brian d foy] A day with Airespace in Cisco's lab [Erik Parker] Myths and legends and tablet Macs [Giles Turnbull] Nokia 770: Our generation's Tri-corder/PADD? [Todd Ogasawara] > More from O'Reilly Developer Weblogs S-video to Composite Video Hacking... EE 476 Final Project MP3 Player 0wning the 2.4Ghz Spectrum Show JAX-WS 2.0 CVS repository now on java.net by Doug Kohlert On "Rethinking the Java SOAP Stack" by Marc Hadley Send us your pics by Daniel H. Steinberg Free event at my place (Bay Area) by Calvin Austin The OBLOOYAS pattern? by Daniel H. Steinberg JSR-274 - Standardizing BeanShell by Pat Niemeyer Microsoft at JavaOne 2005 by Arun Gupta |
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