rwatsh.blogspot.com
FitProgrammer@Work: Enabling RDP on Windows Vista Home Premium 64 Bit (SP2)
http://rwatsh.blogspot.com/2009/09/enabling-rdp-on-windows-vista-home.html
My "pensive" - where i simply siphon the excess thoughts from my mind, pour them into the basin (of cloud storage), and examine them at leisure. Sunday, September 27, 2009. Enabling RDP on Windows Vista Home Premium 64 Bit (SP2). I found the hack mentioned in this blog http:/ andrewblock.net/? Work for me pretty well. Am able to RDP from Win XP Pro to my Vitsa Home Premium 64 Bit SP2 with no issue so far. Update: For enabling RDP on Windows 7 Home Premium, refer to this forum post. It worked for me.
rwatsh.blogspot.com
FitProgrammer@Work: Using TestNG with Emma for automating test code coverage report generation
http://rwatsh.blogspot.com/2008/03/using-testng-with-emma-for-automating.html
My "pensive" - where i simply siphon the excess thoughts from my mind, pour them into the basin (of cloud storage), and examine them at leisure. Thursday, March 13, 2008. Using TestNG with Emma for automating test code coverage report generation. TestNG and Emma can be used together to automate the generation of code coverage report after every test run in the ANT builld script. Following ant build script snippet shows how both tools are used together for this important metrics collection. Property name=...
rwatsh.blogspot.com
FitProgrammer@Work: May 2015
http://rwatsh.blogspot.com/2015_05_01_archive.html
My "pensive" - where i simply siphon the excess thoughts from my mind, pour them into the basin (of cloud storage), and examine them at leisure. Saturday, May 23, 2015. My TOEFL Test experience. Today i took my TOEFL test. Now the specifics on each section while i still remember it :):. I don't remember exactly how many audio clips were there in all but the general pattern was you listen to a clip and then answer multiple choice question on them. Discussion on quora it seems it is a decent score to apply...
rwatsh.blogspot.com
FitProgrammer@Work: Using Quartz Scheduler in a Java EE Web Application
http://rwatsh.blogspot.com/2007/03/using-quartz-scheduler-in-java-ee-web.html
My "pensive" - where i simply siphon the excess thoughts from my mind, pour them into the basin (of cloud storage), and examine them at leisure. Saturday, March 31, 2007. Using Quartz Scheduler in a Java EE Web Application. At times, you may have wanted to perform some action periodically in your web application. Quartz is an enterprise grade scheduler which can be used for such a task. Read here for the complete list of features of Quartz. For using the Quartz scheduler. Orgquartz.threadPool.cla...Orgqu...
rwatsh.blogspot.com
FitProgrammer@Work: Book Review: Intermittent Fasting
http://rwatsh.blogspot.com/2015/05/book-review-intermittent-fasting.html
My "pensive" - where i simply siphon the excess thoughts from my mind, pour them into the basin (of cloud storage), and examine them at leisure. Thursday, May 14, 2015. Book Review: Intermittent Fasting. Notes from the book:. Intermittent Fasting: Simple Guide to Weight Loss, Fat Loss, and Improved Health - THE FAT LOSS AND ANTI AGING DIET (Intermittent Fasting for Weight Loss, . Loss, Weight Loss Diet, Lose Fat Book 1) (Childs, Valerie;Louis, Joy). Calories in versus calories out is what matters. As...
rickyclarkson.blogspot.com
Ricky's technical blog: October 2009
http://rickyclarkson.blogspot.com/2009_10_01_archive.html
General musings on programming languages, and Java. Tuesday, October 27, 2009. 100 Bugs (ok, tickets) in 100 Days. I've now closed 100 tickets in the last 100 calendar days at work. Which might not mean a lot, but it's been a personal target of mine to get to this point, so I'll celebrate it by, um, blogging! Posted by Ricky Clarkson. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). A salsa dancing, DJing programmer from Manchester, England. View my complete profile. David R. MacIver. A DSL with a View.
rickyclarkson.blogspot.com
Ricky's technical blog: January 2010
http://rickyclarkson.blogspot.com/2010_01_01_archive.html
General musings on programming languages, and Java. Monday, January 18, 2010. JNI applets = pain! I mostly work on GUI software for controlling and viewing video from security cameras. The software is written in Java, and mostly written by people who are no longer with the company. The usual app I work on is a Swing application, but there is also an applet, which displays just a viewer; the controls for it are HTML buttons around the applet. Via JNI bindings generated by SWIG. This wasn't too bad, and we...
rickyclarkson.blogspot.com
Ricky's technical blog: September 2009
http://rickyclarkson.blogspot.com/2009_09_01_archive.html
General musings on programming languages, and Java. Saturday, September 26, 2009. Which language shall we learn? We decided, while drinking an overly-priced red wine the other night, that I'd help you to learn how to program, but without making it sound complicated. So, I thought I'd show you a few different language syntaxes and let you choose. Posted by Ricky Clarkson. Links to this post. It seems fairly trivial that, in, say, Java, Math.cos(double) is not object-oriented. It doesn't take any o...Metho...
rickyclarkson.blogspot.com
Ricky's technical blog: December 2009
http://rickyclarkson.blogspot.com/2009_12_01_archive.html
General musings on programming languages, and Java. Tuesday, December 08, 2009. Deleting code, what first? I have about 200kloc of Java code to work with, and I often stumble across bits that are more complex than they need to be, costing me time when I'm trying to solve something else. Within reason, having a smaller body of code is an improvement. Here are my guidelines, mainly for myself, to shrinking it. Watch out for main methods when you delete code - there are a few ad-hoc utilities in our codebase.
rickyclarkson.blogspot.com
Ricky's technical blog: Deleting code, what first?
http://rickyclarkson.blogspot.com/2009/12/deleting-code-what-first.html
General musings on programming languages, and Java. Tuesday, December 08, 2009. Deleting code, what first? I have about 200kloc of Java code to work with, and I often stumble across bits that are more complex than they need to be, costing me time when I'm trying to solve something else. Within reason, having a smaller body of code is an improvement. Here are my guidelines, mainly for myself, to shrinking it. Watch out for main methods when you delete code - there are a few ad-hoc utilities in our codebase.