Miguel Carrasco: Watch TV for Free – Part 2:
Watch TV for Free
Miguel Carrasco: Watch TV for Free – Part 2:
Watch TV for Free
Free photos for your Web site or blog | News.blog | CNET News.com:
Sick to death of the rotten stick figures that come with PowerPoint? Want to punch up your presentations, your blog, your Web site? Getting ready to shell out money for custom or stock photography? Don’t. Instead, get free photos at Yotophoto or Everystockphoto. These sites index royalty-free photography. Both have search engines, and both index–they don’t store–photos from various sources around the Web (including Wikipedia, Flickr, and other sites). In my quick tests, the Yotophoto search engine performed better, generally returning more relevant hits. While the photos on the sites are free to use, even for commercial purposes, they are not without restrictions. Most of the photos I saw were under some form of attribution license: You have to credit the photographer. Also, you can’t resell the images in your own archive. For people who need a little extra zing in their blogs or presentations, these sites are valuable resources.
Cracking WEP and WPA Wireless Networks – Docupedia:
Cracking WEP and WPA Wireless Networks
Bob Lee’s Blog: Exception Handling in Web Applications:
Solution: NestedException Failing early helps avoid these pitfalls. The original stack trace in addition to other pertinent state information (user IDs, primary keys, method arguments, etc.) is a troubleshooter’s best friend. I’ve found that when faced with a checked exception I can’t possibly handle, it’s best to wrap the exception in a runtime exception (once) and throw it to the top where it can ultimately be thrown to the web container. The exception propagates to the top sans explicit handling until the web container catches and logs it once and only once. We can accomplish this with a class called NestedException which I originally inherited from my friend and mentor Tim Williams and mentioned in my book Bitter EJB. NestedException wraps exceptions only when necessary (so we don’t end up with exceptions nested fifteen deep) and keeps the original stack trace intact. The catch block becomes: catch (CheckedException e) { throw NestedException.wrap(e); } NestedException consists of a simple wrapper class and static factory method, wrap(Throwable). NestedException overrides all methods to delegate to the wrapped exception (you don’t even need to unwrap it to get the message or stack trace you’re really interested in):
Index of 500 Full Length Cartoons on YouTube:
Index of 500 Full Length Cartoons on YouTube
Elle est jeune, jolie et… complètement déjantée. C’est Zazon, la vidéoblogueuse dont tout le monde parle (découverte pour ma part via Etolane). Quelque part entre Baffie et Lafesse, une nouvelle (blogo) star semble être née…
Time Tracker est un petit service tout simple et gratuit qui permet de gérer le temps assigné à des tâches définies. Vous saisissez l’intitulé d’un travail en cours, vous lancez le chrono, vous enregistrez le bazar et hop le chrono est lancé. Et si vous bossez de plusieurs postes ou lieux géographiques vous pouvez récupérer vos données et ainsi avoir un suivi du tracking du temps consacré à une tâche.