Keith Barrows
Musings on Microsoft Technologies and other technical things
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May 15th - May 31st: 2 weeks in review
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EntLib - The application attempted to perform an operation not allowed by the security policy.
When using Enterprise Library Blocks you may end up with this error. I used to have a blog entry on all of the specifics but I've lost that entry when my DB crashed several years ago. I am dating this blog entry for that time period and who knows, I may yet try to recover my old DB.
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May 1st - May 14th: 2 weeks in review
Friday, May 14, 2004 #
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April 30th - A week in review
Since I have moved my tech blog to my site I don't post here much anymore. To help ease the transition I will be doing a post every 1-2 weeks giving a review of what I've posted. So, here we go...
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Moving my weblog
I am slowly moving this blog over to my site at http://weblogs.sol3.net/starpilot. This blog will hang around for awhile until I can get all my data moved. Since this is a “done by hand” task, <ughh/>, it may take some time...
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Losing Events in code-behind
Have you been working days, weeks months on a web app when all of a sudden button clicks stop working and you cannot figure out why? I'm not sure why this is happening but it is very frustrating.
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CSK 2.0 - Data Entry
Moved to my personal site.
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Bayesian Statistics and Spam
One of the things about email that really chaps my hide is the amount of junk that I get everyday. Now, there are several products out there that offer spam protection and some of those are annoying as all get out. When I fire off a response to a mail list I don't want to have to visit a webpages, type in a hidden word, just so the person asking the question can get the answer from me. To me, foisting off the responsibility to the sender is not a clean way to handle spam.
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Microsoft links Outlook to Lotus
Lotus includes an e-mail program of its own, but IBM has found that many customers prefer to work with Outlook, which is part of Microsoft's widespread Office productivity package.
April 13, 2004 on C|Net News.Com -
Zalman TNN 500A - The ultimate choice for a noiseless computer!
The aptly-named Totally No Noise 500A (TNN 500A) is the world's first absolutely noiseless and fanless computer case, from the number one quiet cooling manufacturer, Zalman. With a constant desire to have the ultimate PC comes faster and therefore noisier fans. As PC's become commonplace in a home environment, as well as in more specific fields such as audio and video production, so the benefit of a noiseless system is clear. When a high performance totally silent PC platform is required, this is the case of choice!