Archive | July, 2003

East Tennessee Fox Pro User Groupâs July meeting: Rox Seibert

EastTennesseeFoxProUserGroup.
Tuesday, July 29: 6:00-6:30 or 6:45 Pizza and mingle, 6:45 Welcome to all by Curtis Jones, 7:00-8:30pm Main Presentation

Roxanne Seibert
Presentation Layer Finesse: A crash course in good website design for software developers

The world revolves around the browser in this day and age, and it probably is no surprise that user interface design isnât the same animal anymore. But who has the time to become a full-fledged web designer when there are so many rapid changes happening to technologies in the software development arena? This session will give software developers a crash course in good web design so that your browser-based user interfaces look polished without a lot of trial and error. Topics covered include an overview of best practices for web design, cascading style sheets and why we need them, how JavaScript can make your life easier in the middle-tier, tools of the trade, and commonly found browser compatibility gotchas.

High Range Locking Bug in VFP?

There’s an interesting topic on the FoxForum Wiki on a phenomenon that happens with large tables (close to two gigabytes when records are locked. “HighRangeLockingBug. There is apparently a problem with VFP’s locking scheme, at least on Windows XP. I’ve always thought that VFP locked at (2GB + record number), which was one of the reasons that tables are limited to 2GB. This is wrong. VFP doesn’t lock at… ” from FoxForum Wiki

Powerbook Switcher…

Ernie’s falling in love with his new machine. No surprise there. Here’s hoping to a long honeymoon… “Switching to OS X – Preview 03. My new 12″ Powerbook has arrived and I’ll have more to say about the wonderful features it has later.  But on the topic of OS X as an operating system here’s the score so far.  I have attached many “windows only” devices to it and they have all been recognized quickly by the Powerbook…. One thing you hear a lot from people who switch to Apple is how “stuff just works.” I’ve got a pretty clear picture now of what they are talking about.

[Ernie the Attorney]

Two battery=powered Inkjet printers reviewed

David Pogue reviews battery-powered printers in this review. I’d been considering a portable printer for booth duty at various conferences I attend, but these printers seem a bit expensive and slow for what you get. Since the booths will already have AC power for laptops and projectors, battery power is probably not reason enough to compromise on quality, performance and price. Guess I’ll look at buying an ordinary AC-powered printer… For Printing on the Run, Inkjets to Go. “Tiny new battery-operated printers from Canon and Hewlett-Packard may have you making hard copies on the road. How good are they?” By David Pogue. [New York Times: Technology]

Arrived in Knoxville!

Man, is Virginia big! Especially on I-81. Lovely scenery, but so much of it! Left the hotel at 6 AM, made too many stops for coffee and breakfast, arrived 1:15 PM. 18 Hours driving, averaging 57 mph and 35 mpg. That’s including a one-hour, 15 mile bumper-to-bumper stretch on I-84 getting out of COnnecticut. All in all, it could have been a lot worse. Glad to be here in one piece.

Day One Completed Successfully

Made it to Woodstock, Virginia, in one long drive, around eleven hours. New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia along the way. Getting out of Connecticut was murder. And, ten miles short of my destination, another nasty accident in the dark, wet roads resulted in a one mile backup. But, other than that, pretty smooth sailing, especially considering I was keeping the company of many amateur long-distance drivers on this holiday weekend.

Counted plates from every state along the east coast from Maine to Florida, along with D.C., Wisconsin, Minnesota and Alabama. Hoping for another uneventful drive tomorrow.

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This work by Ted Roche is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.