Free Ebook Manual Download

Programming, Automotive, Hardware, Gadget

The following document is intended as a guideline for developing secure web-based applications. It is not about how to configure firewalls, intrusion detection, DMZ or how to resist DDoS attacks. This is a task best addressed at system and network level. However, there is little material available today intended for developers. We have entered the dotcom age in which a web site is no longer an isolated site, but an extension of the internal business systems, yet there isn’t much about how to create this extension securely.
Read the rest of this entry »

Google Chrome Inside Out Article

Google Chrome is out, brand new and shiny, and with its launch a new set of standards for all web browsers is implemented for both end users and developers. At this moment the Internet is flooded with details and info on Google’s newest and hottest application designed to link the user to the pool of information on the web. Unlike successful browsers such as Mozilla Firefox, Opera and even Internet Explorer, Google’s approach in building Chrome differs in that the app is built from scratch without giving in to formalities (that is why, at first use, most users will waste time looking for the menu bar). The program seems as if all the features were added as soon as the tester needed them. None of its features are unnecessary or redundant in terms of access.
Read the rest of this entry »

Installing Fedora Core 1

There are three basic parts to installing FC: downloading and creating CDs, the initial installation process, and final setup. Fedora Core comes as a series of three ISO files, each about 650 MB in size. After downloading and verifying the files, you’ll want to put them onto CDs. Most every version of Windows comes with CD-burning software, so I won’t belabor that process here. It’s not quite as straightforward on a Linux box, though, so I’ll provide explicit details for creating CDs with Linux.
Read the rest of this entry »

The emergence of Web 2.0 technologies has created opportunities for the visualization of much information on the web. It is, therefore, one of the empowering sources for learning, or so-called e-learning 2.0 (Downes, 2005). Educators are starting to explore the potential of blogs, media-sharing services and other social software - which, although not designed specifically for e-learning, can be used to empower students and create exciting new learning opportunities. During the past few years, Web technology has been rapidly developed in order to increase its functionalities and design; however, this might indirectly increase more barriers to another group of users. To put it differently, those for whom the Web is inaccessible for whatever reason will become increasingly excluded from mainstream life if it is not made accessible to them. The way this information is presented may mean that it is difficult, or impossible, for people with various forms of disability to access it. A visual on a screen is of no use to someone who is blind. Nonetheless, there are many solutions for this problem today and hopefully even more in the near future.
Read the rest of this entry »

Serial ATA interface disc drives are designed for easy installation. It is normally not necessary to set any jumpers, terminators, or other settings on this drive for proper operation. With a Serial ATA (SATA) interface, each disc drive has its own cable that connects directly to a Serial ATA host adapter or a Serial ATA port on your motherboard. Unlike Parallel ATA, there is no master-slave relationship between drives that use a Serial ATA interface.
Read the rest of this entry »

User Function 80 Auto Tray Switch User Function 81 Paper Size Check User Function 82 LAN Print T.O. User Function 83 POP Interval User Function 84 Delete POP Message User Function 85 Time Between GMT User Function 86 Text Print User Function 87 Header Print User Function 88 Coding Mode User Function 89 Extra Fine Mode User Function 90 IFAX Sender ID User Function 91 Domain Name User Function 92 Message Disposition Notification User Function
Read the rest of this entry »

AVGateway Audio Interface Controller with built-in Apple® iPod™ interface Powered by Copyright (C) 2003-2007 VAIS Technology iPod is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries. This unit supports only iPod software versions after the October 2004 update. The iPod has NOT been designed to withstand automotive temperature extremes. You may damage your iPod If you leave it inside the vehicle on a hot or cold day. For further information please refer to the iPod manual.
Read the rest of this entry »

The function library in R/3 provides a facility for generating and then downloading RFC programs to a workstation or PC. This facility is the RFC Interface Generator. With this tool, you can create RFC stub programs (that call SAP function modules) and example programs (that show how to call stub programs). The RFC Generator is only available for and in R/3 Systems and not for R/2 Systems. Generating RFC Stubs: RFC stub programs contain all the parameter-handling and communications necessary to call SAP function modules from a non-SAP System. Once a stub has been exported to your machine, you can compile it as a library file or DLL (dynamic-link library) routine. DLL routines can be called without having been linked together with your program at compile time. You can call DLL routines from any programming language whose compiler offers DLL options. (This includes, for example, most recent C and BASIC compilers.)
Read the rest of this entry »

« Previous Entries