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Borland Delphi is known to be a great environment for the development of stand-alone and client-server applications on the Microsoft Windows platform. Its virtues range from full OOP support to visual development, in a unique combination of power and ease. However, the new frontier of development is now Internet programming. What has Delphi got to offer in this new context? Which are the features you can rely upon to build great Internet applications with Delphi? That’s what this paper intends to reveal. We’ll see that Delphi can be used:
• For direct socket and TCP/IP programming;
• In conjunction with third-party components that implement the most common Internet protocols, on the client or the server side;
• To produce HTML pages on the server side, with the WebBroker and Internet Express architectures;
• As well as to work with Microsoft’s core technologies, including MTS, COM, ASP, and ActiveX.
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E-commerce, pay-per-use online services, user-authentication and tracking for e-learning, online gaming, contests… What do all of these applications have in common? The need for secure transfer of encrypted data between client workstations and server applications. According to a study by Gartner Consulting, the growing concern for Internet security parallels the evolution of e-business. In the earliest days of Internet development, the emphasis was on distributing content over the web and making it available to anyone. Now, as the Internet matures, clients are more concerned with ensuring that their assets, both monetary and intellectual, are protected from those who may commit fraud or abuse them. This is why more and more developers have been looking for security solutions.
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We use the PICPgm Develop Software for writing our codes into the Flash Memory of the PIC Microcontroller. PICPgm is very good open source software for Windows. Works well with Windows 98, XP and Vista. It supports even our JDM based programmer circuit. Here is a Screenshot of the software as you open it (without connecting any hardware circuitry).
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The Data Specialist Plus is the most complete programming device for digital odometers,airbag modules, car radios, car immobilizers. It is a high-quality embedded system, which offers a maximum of flexibility and working comfort.
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This guide will show you how to renew your old existing Bonnet Pin and Lock. Please read this guide through at least once before fitting.
Step 1. (Optional) Preparation prior to fitting
Before you start removing your old parts you may want to consider preventing your new parts from corroding like the existing ones. You could smear a protective oil or grease over the exposed metal and rub it over or you could like myself spray paint the metal parts.
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Tools Required:
-Philips head screw Driver
-3 small flat head screw drivers
-10mm Socket and ratchet
-Needle nose pliers
1. Unscrew the stock shift knob by rotating it counter clockwise.
2. Open the Storage compartment in the center console and remove the foam rubber mat in the bottom. Use a Phillips head screwdriver to remove the 2 screws.
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This is an Installation and User Guide for the SimpleTech® SD Card and SD Card Adapter. The SimpleTech SD Card is a highly secure super small form-factor card used in several devices including Digital Cameras, Personal Digital Assistants (PDA), MP3 music players, digital voice recorders, and other electronic devices such as cell phones, and pagers. The SD Card is a solid-state, nonvolatile removable and reusable mass storage which shows up as an ATA hard drive to the host. However, compared to ATA/IDE/ESDI hard drives with rotating discs, the Solid State SD Card is extremely rugged and very compact.
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Hey! Socket programming got you down? Is this stuff just a little too difficult to figure out from the man pages? You want to do cool Internet programming, but you don’t have time to wade through a gob of struct s trying to figure out if you have to call bind() before you connect(), etc., etc. Well, guess what! I’ve already done this nasty business, and I’m dying to share the information with everyone! You’ve come to the right place. This document should give the average competent C programmer the edge s/he needs to get a grip on this networking noise.
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