These are my links for October 26th through October 31st:
Bookmarks for October 26th through October 31st
Author: Brian WahoffOct 31
Bookmarks for August 13th through August 17th
Author: Brian WahoffAug 17
These are my links for August 13th through August 17th:
- Eric Schmidt and the End of an Era – CIO.com –
- An implausibly illustrated introduction to HTML5 Web Workers –
- Make CSS3 buttons that are extremely fancy – The Official Posterous Tech Blog –
- Microsoft: Vista Paved the Way for Secure Windows – CIO.com –
- How To View Live Weather Radar On Google Earth –
- FluidKit – "This is a WPF library containing a powerhouse of controls, frameworks, helpers, tools, etc. for productive WPF development.<br />
If you have ever heard of Drag and Drop with Attached properties, ElementFlow, GlassWindow, this is the library that will contain all such goodies. " - Finally – Our Windows 7 .NET Wrappers are out – public class Alon : ISmartHome, ICPP, IHomeServer, IMediaCenter –
Bookmarks for March 18th from 07:42 to 09:12
Author: Brian WahoffMar 18
These are my links for March 18th:
- Nicholas Piël » Benchmark of Python Web Servers – An extremely techie article – comparing the performance characteristics of different wsgi server implementations for hosting python sites.
- Free Fantasy Sports League Finance Management – Wish I'd thought of this idea
- Deal-a-day sites and retailers get social – Fortune Brainstorm Tech –
- 60% of Virtual Servers Less Secure Than Physical Machines, Gartner Says – CIO.com – Business Technology Leadership –
- New Internet Browser Threat Sneaks By Traditional Defenses – CIO.com – Business Technology Leadership – "An undetectable browser exploit that bares corporate networks to attackers tops the list of the most potentially effective new attacks that have been devised by researchers seeking vulnerabilities to take advantage of, according to a study by White Hat Security."
- Maybe Users Aren’t So Funny After All – CIO.com – Business Technology Leadership – "I can't stop thinking about my experience last month when I had to reload Windows XP for a friend. It makes me think we need to reconsider how we in the security world have failed the consumer. Should it really be necessary for a consumer to be a security expert to safely use a computer?"
