I have to say that I came across a rather stupid forum posting this morning.
Call me old school but programmers were usually the "smarter ones". In most cases they had more expertise and skills than Web designers did while Web designers remained the creative ones. Web designers did a better job at what they do but they don’t deal with as many programming languages as traditional programmers do. My point is that being a "traditional" programmer you know a little more about programming in general and (should) know at least the very (very, very, very) basics of other programming languages (HTML , anyone?).
As a both Delphi and Macromedia (now Adobe) Dreamweaver user it makes me wonder what the person was thinking. Sure Delphi is fine for ASP.Net Web applications but to use it a replacement for Dreamweaver ? Although it can help with some editing it cannot replace or compare to a professional web editing package that Dreamweaver is. The former is an excellent RAD package while the latter is a WYSIWYG web editor.
I was looking for Delphi source codes using Google API when I came across this. I don’t feel like writing code today
Categories: Computers, Programming, Software Tags: adobe, api, delphi, delphi 8, delphi source, google, job, macromedia, old school, programmer, programmers, programming languages, quot, s, source, source codes, web applications, web designers, web editing, wysiwyg html editors, wysiwyg web editor
Yesterday I spent a little over 2 hours trying to fix an AutoCAD setup for an architect. Of 5 computers in the office one was opening files and switching layouts with a very long delay – about 2-3 minutes before you could return to work. Sure, the files were big and had many objects but the workstation was an HP Pentium 4 3.2 GHz with 512 MB of RAM…
The problem was that each time AutoCAD regenerated the whole project it kept working and working… The most time was spent on formatting text so I started poking around in AutoCAD options and then started looking at Windows’ display settings. It was obvious that the whole delay was caused when redrawing the layers.
Well, we finally found the solution. There was nothing else to change in AutoCAD and changing the system Display settings did not affect the speed at all. So I turned off font smoothing in Display | Appearance | Effects and all of a sudden AutoCAD started working like it was supposed too. All 3.2 GHz to your command
I often say this, and it’s so far been true: the simplest solutions are always the hardest to find. I’m an administrator and programmer with years of experience and yet there are problems like this one that waste a lot of my time…
If you ever have this problem I hope Google points you here
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Categories: Computers, Software Tags: appearance, architect, autocad lt 2006, bible, google, hp, hp pentium, layouts, pentium, programmer, simplest solutions, workstation
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