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hai sir
can i use in contentplaceholder in child page
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Urgent Enquiries About Share Point Work Flow.
Naposon Group LMT.
30b Martin Street Lagos
Nigeria .
Tel +234 8025066097
Fax +234 0198993
Hello Chris,
You are receiving this mail from Naposon Group we are newly appointed government Share Point designer which gives us an eager over our rivals here, But the truth is that we have not been able to complete most of the project that is given to us and this is really giving us BIG concern.
We would like to partner with your company so you can assist us sort most of the difficult part of it, We are ready to abide by your laws and we wish this will showcase your companies power in my country,
Hoping receive an urgent response this email so as to enable us put a hold to most of the work we have at the moment.
Thank You.
Mr Uche Howard
Ceo.
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Tonight I closed The Soapbox.
I started the Code Project with David nearly 10 years ago. My goal was to provide a place where software developers could come together and share free source code. Our site grew quickly and attracted an amazing group of developers who were instrumental in providing content for others. Fundamental to the atmosphere we created on The Code Project was the rule that members treat other members with respect.
We opened the lounge soon after we started the site and, boys being boys (at least mostly at that time) things sometimes got a little rowdy. We then opened the Soapbox so that members would have a place to extend discussions on software development to areas not suitable for a PG audience. Language would sometimes get a little blue, discussions on why C++ was better than VB would get personal, and comments on MSDNs latest anchorwoman would, well, go where they would go. It was still all in good fun and (reasonable) good taste for a long time but then it started going downhill.
The Soapbox today is simply a place for a core group of members to discuss US politics, Global warming, religious sterotypes and to launch personal attacks. Often in the same message. The soapbox is no longer a place I can send errant messages, but instead has become a place where errant messages are encourage and condoned and a place that has absolutely nothing to do with what I orginally imagined our site to be.
There are so, so many other sites on the Internet where these topics, flame wars and personal vendettas can be indulged but our site is not one of them. So as of this evening I have closed the soapbox.
I'm sorry to those who genuinely enjoyed the hurly burly of it all but with the realisation that the forum does nothing other than fuel the very behaviour we don't want to see on our site it no longer makes any sense to keep it.
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Thanks Chris that's a good move, but are you sure you electrified all the fences in Lounge?
As a serious reply, I had a little thought. When so many online business minds are struggling so much to attract people to their sites, you got them so easily in the soapbox. Well I'd say SB should never be a part of CP for sure, but you could have moved them out of CP's sight and kept it alive & running somewhere. A simple redirect would do. It might have been worth few Clicks!. Or you might have sold off the entire mob to some online forum-setup craze heads.
For example :
www.CPSOAPBOX.com
-C'mmon let's fight it out here
I know I suck at business ideas, but just my 2 cents
OK,. what country just started work for the day ? The ASP.NET forum is flooded with retarded questions. -Christian Graus
Best wishes to Rexx[^]
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I've asked for the SB to be deleted myself, in the past. Oddly enough, I have my doubts now... but I just hope said troublemakers don't come over to the Lounge or the other forums.
I'm curious, Chris, what was happening last night? Did someone write a bot to tag other people's messages as abuse?
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Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: Did someone write a bot to tag other people's messages as abuse?
Someone just had way too much spare time.
It isn't the voting or the deleting of messages I care about in the least - if the Soapbox crowd wishes to play with the system like that then it's their choice. It was purely a content and purpose issue.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Chris Maunder wrote: Someone just had way too much spare time.
Chris, some of those messages were being deleted where the majority of votes were 5's, and only 2 - 4 votes had been cast. My first thought was sock puppet, but that would still have required in an excess of a half-dozen votes, wouldn't it?
Jon
Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Algoraphobia: An exaggerated fear of the outside world rooted in the belief that one might spontaneously combust due to global warming.
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Yep - it does look like 'mark as abuse' messages were being cast without a corresponding score vote being added as well. Not exactly a security issue (as far as I can tell) but more a cosmetic issue since it does look weird having a 5/5 message marked as Abuse.
I'm still digging to see where the missing votes are going.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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I just took a look at the Lounge Thread "The Soapbox and Option." Ilion has returned (he is usually missing in the afternoon and early evening) and messages are being deleted in there, without any votes in many cases, left and right. Yesterday, while he was not posting, there were no deletions, but when he resumed so did they. I don't know whether that's meaningful or not. But as I've said elsewhere, I believe that he has decided to take this site down. This is a vendetta aimed at you.
Jon
Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Algoraphobia: An exaggerated fear of the outside world rooted in the belief that one might spontaneously combust due to global warming.
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Yep, I see it.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Had the site been closed last Friday, this explanation would have sufficed. However, the problem that occurred on Saturday must have had some impact on your decision. That much of a coincidence doesn't seem to have too much of a probability. Had there not been a security leak, I suspect the SB would be open for business right now.
This is your site, and you have done nothing here that I have not done on (to?) a site I webmaster so I cannot presume to suggest that I know what your site should offer its regs and what it shouldn't. I will miss it and I assure you, that rough behavior or not, compared to many forums out there, SB was a pussycat.
Jon
Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Algoraphobia: An exaggerated fear of the outside world rooted in the belief that one might spontaneously combust due to global warming.
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If it were a security issue I would pull down ALL forums. They all use the same code. The questions on what was going on forced me to trawl through all the messages and it really highlighted what a mess the place was. It's not an issue of how rough or not the SB is, but rather: Does it help the Software Development community, or does it simply promote disrespect?
In an indirect way the messing with the voting provoked the closure by shining the spotlight on the dark corners.
However, see my post in the lounge. It's a beautiful Sunday morning and I'm feeling less depressed about the Soapbox. Maybe there is a way to coexist.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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Chris Maunder wrote: Maybe there is a way to coexist.
I recognize that Soapbox is a privilge. I'll abide by the rules.
Jon
Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Algoraphobia: An exaggerated fear of the outside world rooted in the belief that one might spontaneously combust due to global warming.
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This is the same thing that happened to USENET back in the day. It was an awesome source of information for a long time (in the beginning) and then AOL discovered USENET and exposed it to the unwashed masses. Not long after AOL opened it up it became a place for rants, porn, pirated software and all other kinds of seedy information.
One way to get around this is to apply filters (but then you need moderators) to messages that are deemed Political, Religious, Adult, Rant, etc. and then allow people to see those messages if they choose. The default is of course hidden.
I never read the soapbox personally so I wont miss it but I fear those discussions will now end up in the lounge.
Todd Smith
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Todd Smith wrote: AOL discovered USENET and exposed it to the unwashed masses.
I wasn't thrilled with the ***holes on line, either, but my memories of the alt newsgroups is that they contained more than their fair share of rough and sometimes tough groups before AOL.
Maybe I should've been spending more time looking at other headers. But, for instance, alt.fan.heinlein is an exciting place to hang out - if you don't mind every third poster trying to emulate the grumpiness of Lazarus Long.
Jon
Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Algoraphobia: An exaggerated fear of the outside world rooted in the belief that one might spontaneously combust due to global warming.
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Chris Maunder wrote: boys being boys (at least mostly at that time)
Most of the boys were boys at the time. Good to hear.
Steve
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But in this case - the Back Room.
What exactly is a moderator? Rob said that, briefly, he had edit/delete power for everyone in the forum but it disappeared. If I had it, I never noticed it.
In all honesty I am not sure we need moderation - since elimination of voting from the Back Room, there's been one instance of a troll posting the same message nine or ten times (he was ignored) and the case of someone posting a harmful link - certainly something that could hapen in the public forums as easily as the Back Room and handled without any serious problems by reporting it to you.
However, if there must be such a thing, it is probably better that folks like me who think it is the ultimate of last resorts be vested. Only. . .right now I've got the title and nothing else. i.e. the emperor is feeling a draft.
Jon
Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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Chris,
Please remove me from the Back Room Moderators group, and the list of moderators in the forum heading. I am no longer interested in participating in that forum.
Thanks,
Rob Graham
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You've actually got that power yourself - just edit the forum settings (top left link in the Backroom) and remove yourself from the Back Room Moderators group (Go to My Settings, Groups, and remove yourself)
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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1 Memory Manager
Consider a system which is designed to be portable across platforms. Each platform provides a memory manager - i.e. each platform exposes functions equivalent to new and delete. The system under consideration wants to keep a platform-independent memory management scheme. Assume that the system under consideration is coded only using C++. Please describe the following:
1. Approach
2. C++ class declaration for the new memory manager
3. The memory management strategies (strategies you will follow if the system under consideration is a browser)
4. How would you make sure that all the classes in the system use your memory manager? Provide C++ code for the same. Assume that “new” operator is used if an dynamic object of a class has to be created.
can you please help me out with correct answers.
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You are listing it again? Did they promises for really really true this time to stay out of the lounge if you did?
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Oakman wrote: Did they promises for really really true this time to stay out of the lounge if you did
No, but now that it's listed it means
a) I can move messages there
b) people will (hopefully) be less likely to post material in the SoapBox that should be in the BackRoom
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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I guess we cant take it anywhere then I used to hear this a lot in the lounge "step out to the soapbox!"
On the bright side however, it was a box full of dirt!
So I'd say good move Chris!
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There's always debate[^], complaints[^] and personal preferences as to whether passwords should be encrypted in a database and sent back to a user when it's requested, or whether it should be one-way hashed and 'reset link' (or similar) provided to those users who forget their password.
Over the years we've asked members what they wanted and the preference has changed from "Please send me my original password" to "Please don't send me my password". I, personally, prefer that I get my original password when I ask for it because
a) I hate having to write down or remember Yet Another Password.
b) I don't use the same password for CodeProject as I do for, say, my bank
c) I control my email box
d) Often sites that allow you to reset your password allow anyone to reset your password (meaning you get lots of links that don't work if someone hates you and abuses the system), or they ask you a 'security' question before sending the link. Frankly, everyone knows my Mother's Maiden name ("Mum" AND the name of my first pet ("Cuddles the Rabbit") so these questions, to me, are not very secure. And to be honest I just couldn't be bothered with the extra hassle.
This reasoning doesn't apply for all, and above and beyond these personal reasons of mine there is the simple fact that if you are going to look after personal information of your members you should do it properly.
So, as of today we no longer encrypt passwords, but instead we store them as a one-way hash. This means we can no longer send you your password when you ask for it.
However, I figured we needed to
a) Allow people to maintain their current password if at all possible, and
b) Protect the system from abuse
So when you request a new password, we send you a temporary password and still allow you to sign in with your old password. If you sign in with the temp password then your password becomes the temporary password, permanently. If you suddenly remember your old password and sign in with it, then the temporary password is removed.
Hopefully the best of both worlds with the added security that no one, not us, not you, not your nosy coworkers, will ever know your password.
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Many of us are software developers which is why we mercilessly pillage the articles on CodeProject.com for code and components. However, as a developer I know that there are the rare occasions when I simply want to spend the money to buy a component in order to have the luxury of ringing up the vendor and hassling them for immediate support. The problem is: how do you know if a component is good and where is the good, up-to-date list of components?
In the spirit of "Let's just write one ourselves" we built catalog.codeproject.com[^]. For our members it's a chance to wander through a list of the best components from the top vendors, commenting and rating as they go. If you sell a component yourself then you can post your product into the catalog for free.
Anyone can post their product for free and if you want a little more exposure (fancy colour, image in the listing page) then there are paid upgrades available for those who wish. The main point, though, is that it's open to all CodeProject members regardless of whether you have a freeware product or you work for Microsoft.
It's a service for you guys. We hope you like it, hope you find it useful, and are always looking for suggestions and ideas for improvement.
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