Monday, January 09 2006

As mentioned previously, many of the "notables" are replicated to a cleaner layout over at http://www.yafla.com/dennisforbes/index.html. This was created to make the content a little more suitable for search engines, for those who don't like the "visual clutter" of a blog style format, and as a more friendly way of solidifying the larger, more time consuming posts (rather than having them quickly cycle out of view for casual readers).

Just CVS'd "Tidy" tonight and hooked it into the auto-rendering process (directly from the .NET transformation code) and it works great, making the resulting transformed code a little more universal, and less prone to flagging warnings in artificially strict processors.

   

Reader Comments

You got Spurl'd! ;)
Berislav Lopac @ 1/9/2006 12:13:57 AM
If we link here from elsewhere, do you want us to link to the blog entry, or the static version over at that other location?
Tom K @ 1/9/2006 12:25:58 PM
Thanks Berislav!
Dennis Forbes @ 1/9/2006 6:36:06 PM
Tom K,

If you link externally, you can either link to the item "permalink" (click on the title of the item and it'll redirect you to the permalink), or to the notables static list. Thanks!
Dennis Forbes @ 1/9/2006 6:36:48 PM
Just interested to see that our names are so nearly the same.

Happy New Year
Dennis B Forbes @ 1/9/2006 6:45:25 PM
Hey there Dennis B. (Dennis W. here). I had thought my name wasn't that common, but I'm finding more and more that there are quite a few people named Dennis Forbes out there, and even quite a few named Dennis W. Forbes. I think we need to all start identifying ourselves by GUIDs or something.
Dennis Forbes @ 1/10/2006 8:40:34 AM
Hey Dennis, I was reading Spolsky and saw you're famous.

- Ex-coworker Scott
Scott @ 1/11/2006 1:23:21 PM

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About the Author
Dennis Forbes Dennis Forbes is a Toronto-based software architect. While focused primarily on the .NET and SQL Server worlds, Dennis frequently ventures outside of this comfort zone into game development and image processing. He has been published in several industry magazines, has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal and has been interviewed by NPR.

He is a vice president and lead software architect at an innovative New York City hedge fund back-office services firm.

Dennis has been working on solutions for the financial, telecommunications, and power generation markets for over 15 years.





 

Dennis Forbes