LINKBLOG for September 15, 2008
Sep 15th, 2008 by AZuidhof
‘ Windows Workflow Foundation is a framework for managing workflows. This article describes an implementation using a DotNetNuke module communicating with a Windows Workflow service hosted in a web service ‘
‘ CodePlex is now offering server support for SvnBridge, the tool that enables TortoiseSVN to talk to Team Foundation Server ‘
Lots of pointers to memory management, as you already guessed from the title
‘ The Location column (and Stack Tip) of the Threads window (and the Call Stack window in fact) are not telling you the full truth ‘
Aha. And I always thought project management was only about the lowest, the physiological, level. Now I learn there are even more levels! Cool stuff
Risking to completely ruining the posts’ atmosphere, here are lots of good tips to stay sane in an insane world
Top 100 compilation of the most interesting software development blogs at the moment. Seeing a lot of well known ones, but also lots of new ones to me. Time to update the feed reader. Thanks!
Into detail on the Agile tenet of the “Last Responsible Moment”, which states basically that delaying decisions can be a good thing – in certain situations. OK, so this is not a very clear description, for better one please go read the article
Don’t see much architecture here, but if you leave that out, the title pretty much covers the article
Russell tries to bring together the two extremes of a recent discussion that derailed a little, by picking the best of both and adding some ideas in the mix. And comes up with a possibly more effective way to measure if your new hire will will have in store what you expect from her
Ladies and gents: it’s public!
I don’t normally link to conference reports. This is an exception, ’cause what Alt.NET stands for is getting dearer to me. With the – I’m sorry to say – bitter and cold remarks that keep floating around on Twitter and elsewhere this is a heart warming view of how it ’should be’: it is not about the name that our movement chooses, or the technical implementation of how we reach our goals, or having to be part of some unknown in-crowd. What we see is opportunities to learn and to improve current ways of developing software. Improvement and enthusiasm, that’s what it’s all about, and Ian is able to find the right words for describing exactly this feeling. Whether we call this Alt.NET or apply some Japanese name to it to make it sound more exclusive; it really does not matter.
Once again Michael Lopp provides an insightful glimpse inside the brains of a CEO: here’s the what, how and why on their decisions. These sometimes look insane and at least irrational from the outside. Well, they’re not. Most of the time. The CEO is smarter than you. Most of the time.
‘ Right now, there’s a CEO standing in front of his 85-person start-up at an all-hands meeting and he’s saying, “In the next 90 days, we need to do the impossible” ‘

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