Re: [OT] Windows Server install problems

2024-03-16 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > Just put the server in a vm on win11. All your problems will go away. > Okay, a consensus from such distinguished persons. I'm reconsidering my way forward -- *Greg K* > David Connors > da...@connors.com // +61 417 189 363 > > > On Sun, 17 Mar 2024 at 10:17 am, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet < >

Re: [OT] Windows Server install problems

2024-03-16 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
Just put the server in a vm on win11. All your problems will go away. David Connors da...@connors.com // +61 417 189 363 On Sun, 17 Mar 2024 at 10:17 am, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > They took a lot of device support out of server along the way and that is >> when

RE: [OT] Windows Server install problems

2024-03-16 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2024 11:15 AM To: ozDotNet Cc: Greg Keogh Subject: Re: [OT] Windows Server install problems They took a lot of device support out of server along the way and that is when I stopped running it in my laptop. I'd install windows 11 and turn on hyper v and run server in a

Re: [OT] Windows Server install problems

2024-03-16 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > They took a lot of device support out of server along the way and that is > when I stopped running it in my laptop. I'd install windows 11 and turn on > hyper v and run server in a vm > I guess this means I must shop around for a hardware combination (or a whole box) that specifically runs

Re: [OT] Windows Server install problems

2024-03-15 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
They took a lot of device support out of server along the way and that is when I stopped running it in my laptop. I'd install windows 11 and turn on hyper v and run server in a vm David Connors da...@connors.com // +61 417 189 363 On Fri, 15 Mar 2024 at 16:32, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote: >

Re: AI

2024-02-24 Thread Michael Ridland via ozdotnet
;> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__sqldownunder.com_=DwMFAg=euGZstcaTDllvimEN8b7jXrwqOf-v5A_CdpgnVfiiMM=2rgtwrXggQFZiZbisdwDooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=o3oFliHztOF8D9Nbqaa7KQdqC-zkQNXWl4IqnEG58Wc=> >>>

Re: AI

2024-02-24 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
uognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=o3oFliHztOF8D9Nbqaa7KQdqC-zkQNXWl4IqnEG58Wc=> >>> | >>> About Greg: https://about.me/greg.low >>> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__about.me_greg.low=DwMFAg=euGZstcaTDllvim

Re: AI

2024-02-23 Thread Tom Gao via ozdotnet
AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> >> >> >> >> *From:* mike smith via ozdotnet >> >> *Sent:* Friday, February 23, 2024 12:19 PM >> *To:* ozDotNet >> *Cc:* mike sm

Re: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Tom Rutter via ozdotnet
cb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> > > > > *From:* mike smith via ozdotnet > > *Sent:* Friday, February 23, 2024 12:19 PM > *To:* ozDotNet > *Cc:* mike smith > *Subject:* Re: AI > > >

Re: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
QL (1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile >>> >>> SQL Down Under | Web: https://sqldownunder.com >>> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__sqldownunder.com_=DwMFAg=euGZstcaTDllvimEN8b7jXrwqOf-v5A_CdpgnVfiiMM=2rgtwrXggQFZiZbisdwDooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7B

Re: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
DooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=o3oFliHztOF8D9Nbqaa7KQdqC-zkQNXWl4IqnEG58Wc=> >> | >> About Greg: https://about.me/greg.low >> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__about.me_greg.low=DwMFAg=euGZstcaTDllvimEN8b7jXrwqOf-

Re: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__about.me_greg.low=DwMFAg=euGZstcaTDllvimEN8b7jXrwqOf-v5A_CdpgnVfiiMM=2rgtwrXggQFZiZbisdwDooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> > &g

RE: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
pgnVfiiMM=2rgtwrXggQFZiZbisdwDooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> From: mike smith via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, February 23, 2024 12:19 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: mike smith Subject:

RE: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
ooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> From: Dr Greg Low Sent: Friday, February 23, 2024 12:11 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: Tom Gao Subject: RE: AI Hi Tom, For me, it depends what you want it to do.

Re: AI

2024-02-22 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
"old system views" That makes me wonder if it has any way of differentiating between something it found from a decade ago to more recent data. Mike On Fri, 23 Feb 2024, 11:43 Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet, wrote: > Hi Tom, > > > > For me, it depends what you want it to do. It certainly can appear

RE: AI

2024-02-22 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
Hi Tom, For me, it depends what you want it to do. It certainly can appear to help someone who’s new to an area. For most code writing, I’ve been pretty underwhelmed. As an example, if I ask it to write SQL, I get a very poor outcome. It will use old deprecated views instead of the current

Re: CPU profiling an MS unit test

2024-02-22 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
Nah. When you click start, it starts whichever project is set to Start, which in my case was some WinForms old test project of no use. You can't set a library to start. I created a mini test project which did some CPU and IO work. If I start the profiler it starts and waits, and when I run a unit

Re: CPU profiling an MS unit test

2024-02-20 Thread Greg Harris via ozdotnet
I asked Chat GPT... Far too late at night for me to read / understand the response How do I run a CPU performance profiler over a [TestMethod] in my c# unit test project. ChatGPT Running a CPU performance profiler over a [TestMethod] in your C# unit test project involves several steps and

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-17 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > Perhaps not ideal but maybe the app can go into the app store but nobody > can actually use it without an account which you would only allow your > users to create. Just an idea. > Each phone running the app needs its app-generated ID registered in a master XML file, so the public can't run

RE: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-17 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
js6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> From: Dr Greg Low Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2024 5:21 PM To: 'ozDotNet' Cc: Greg Keogh Subject: RE: Private Apple App distribution Are you in the Apple Developer program? I’m guessing there might be a test option there. Regards, Greg Dr Greg Low 1300SQLSQL (

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-17 Thread Tom Rutter via ozdotnet
Perhaps not ideal but maybe the app can go into the app store but nobody can actually use it without an account which you would only allow your users to create. Just an idea. On Wed, 17 Jan 2024 at 14:48, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote: > Folks, > > We're planning a MAUI app to be installed on

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-17 Thread David Richards via ozdotnet
You can use an MDM. MacOS has one but it's not suitable for enterprise. If you're only serving a few hundred devices, it might be good enough. You have to set it up via Apple Business Manager. It's pretty crappy and chokes under any kind of load so I don't recommend. We moved away from this as it

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
XrwqOf-v5A_CdpgnVfiiMM=2rgtwrXggQFZiZbisdwDooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> > > > > *From:* Greg Keogh via ozdotnet > *Sent:* Wednesday, January 17, 2024 4:46 PM > *To:* oz

RE: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
via ozdotnet Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2024 4:46 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: Greg Keogh Subject: Re: Private Apple App distribution So you're all telling me that there is no "side load" feature for iPhone apps?! This is a dreadful obstacle to getting the app onto company staff phones. L

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
So you're all telling me that there is no "side load" feature for iPhone apps?! This is a dreadful obstacle to getting the app onto company staff phones. Luckily I have an Apple account that was recently renewed (for 150 goddamn $), but I'll have to fill-in all the store compliance documentation

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
The Pro and Pro Max do, the others don't. On Wed, 17 Jan 2024 at 15:35, mike smith via ozdotnet wrote: > They're not even doing full speed USB C iirc > > We've come full circle: remember db25 connections, the only thing standard > was the connector. > > Mike > > On Wed, 17 Jan 2024, 15:45

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
They're not even doing full speed USB C iirc We've come full circle: remember db25 connections, the only thing standard was the connector. Mike On Wed, 17 Jan 2024, 15:45 David Connors via ozdotnet, < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > Yeah they did for iPhone 15 - still sell the old ones with

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
Yeah they did for iPhone 15 - still sell the old ones with Lightning, and most headphones, and mice, and trackpads, and probably other things. I love how Apple used the argument that they didn't want to be forced to do it because it would stifle innovation - meanwhile they're selling lightning

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
Didn't the Euros make them go to USB C? On Wed, 17 Jan 2024, 15:31 David Connors via ozdotnet, < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > I am sure other countries will jump on board once the technical > precedence has been set. > > Apple can be very stubborn in holding on to old/dumb ideas. They're

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
I am sure other countries will jump on board once the technical precedence has been set. Apple can be very stubborn in holding on to old/dumb ideas. They're still selling stuff with lightning connector in 2024. On Wed, 17 Jan 2024 at 14:12, mike smith via ozdotnet wrote: > So the "way" will be

RE: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
From: mike smith via ozdotnet Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2024 3:11 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: mike smith Subject: Re: Private Apple App distribution So the "way" will be to use a VPN, and set your Apple devices up in Europe? I'm wondering if any other countries will jump on board. Mi

Re: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
So the "way" will be to use a VPN, and set your Apple devices up in Europe? I'm wondering if any other countries will jump on board. Mike On Wed, 17 Jan 2024, 14:29 Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet, wrote: > Interesting that there’s been a discussion going on with the EU about > this. They’re

RE: Private Apple App distribution

2024-01-16 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
Interesting that there’s been a discussion going on with the EU about this. They’re insisting that Apple allow “side-loading” of apps. In response, Apple has apparently said they’re splitting their app store with one for EU, and one for the rest of the world. Regards, Greg Dr Greg Low

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2024-01-03 Thread Craig vN via ozdotnet
I haven't tried with hundreds of files uploaded in one batch, would need to start accounting for retry if they fail. But a few files of 100mb is no problem. On Wed, Jan 3, 2024 at 11:14 AM Greg Keogh via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > Folks (welcome to the distant future of 2024) > >

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2024-01-02 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> > > > > *From:* DotNet Dude via ozdotnet > *Sent:* Wednesday, January 3, 2024 4:17 PM > *To:* ozDotNet > *Cc:* DotNet Dude > *Subject:* Re: Web app large uploads and downloads > > > >

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2024-01-02 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
It's not a direct answer, but I'd feel happier uploading to OneDrive and passing the server a link to that. Mike On Sat, 30 Dec 2023, 08:29 Greg Keogh via ozdotnet, wrote: > Folks (anyone working?) > > I've been asked to add a feature to a Blazor Webassembly app to allow > uploads and

RE: Web app large uploads and downloads

2024-01-02 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
pgnVfiiMM=2rgtwrXggQFZiZbisdwDooYFalucb-vLhjG0McaanBZKn0UVuognuHqfHnjp2AVc=I23jyX4AKIv9q2x7A3CQAer9PGCjq8R6DwW7BE1IAhZ1JbigKMrMPRCjs6AqW7h3=NsAibgiqfCxsyc8m2DBKogKQcs3OqE3mkyCjmpoYxTk=> From: DotNet Dude via ozdotnet Sent: Wednesday, January 3, 2024 4:17 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: DotNet Dude Subject: Re: W

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2024-01-02 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
Yep we usually do this sort of thing with a batch process, particularly if there are large files. I don’t see any web app being used just to upload a bunch of files. For fun try asking ChatGPT or one of the others to see where they go. On Wed, 3 Jan 2024 at 11:13, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote:

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2024-01-02 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
Folks (welcome to the distant future of 2024) I'm pretty sure that there is no sensible way to provide a bulk Azure Blob upload facility in a web hosted app (Wasm, JS or whatever). There could be thousands of files with a total size up to hundreds of MB. Managers are currently using a WPF program

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2023-12-31 Thread Tom P via ozdotnet
I assume you have a client Blazor wasm app that uploads the file to a server app (ie web api) which would then upload to azure or wherever. Is this what you are asking? Thanks Tom On Sun, 31 Dec 2023 at 10:19, Craig vN via ozdotnet wrote: > I don't know Blazor, but there are a ton of pure Js

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2023-12-30 Thread Craig vN via ozdotnet
I don't know Blazor, but there are a ton of pure Js file uploaders. One I like is https://www.dropzone.dev/ which should be able to be configured to upload directly to blog storage, ie not have to send the files to your webserver first

Re: Web app large uploads and downloads

2023-12-29 Thread kirsten greed via ozdotnet
How about this one? https://demos.devexpress.com/blazor/Upload On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 10:06 AM Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > Hi Greg, > > > > Are you using any Blazor frameworks? Several of them seem to have pretty > good file upload components. That might give the

RE: Web app large uploads and downloads

2023-12-29 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
Hi Greg, Are you using any Blazor frameworks? Several of them seem to have pretty good file upload components. That might give the best experience. Regards, Greg Dr Greg Low 1300SQLSQL (1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile SQL Down Under | Web:

Re: [OT] Contracting PAYG vs ABN

2023-12-11 Thread Steven Parish via ozdotnet
with respect to controlling your finances. But everyone is different. Kind Regards, Steven Parish From: Dan Cash via ozdotnet Date: Tuesday, 12 December 2023 at 4:56 am To: ozDotNet Cc: Tom P , Dan Cash Subject: Re: [OT] Contracting PAYG vs ABN Recommendation If this is your "one job" ,

Re: [OT] Contracting PAYG vs ABN

2023-12-11 Thread Dan Cash via ozdotnet
*Recommendation* If this is your "one job" , the cost and hassle of GST and PAYG accounting, quarterly / annual reporting probably make working through the ABN more trouble than its worth. *Background* For contracting, ABN is frequently tied to a company ("Interposed Entity") setup both as

Re: [OT] Contracting PAYG vs ABN

2023-12-11 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
You should seek advice from a chartered accountant but briefly, if more than 50% of your income comes from your own personal efforts then just go with PAYG. You're being asked this question because the ATO etc does not like people who are individual employees behaving as if they're companies when

Re: Many years ago

2023-12-08 Thread Dan Cash via ozdotnet
Thanks Alan.I used bsky-social-vqjpx-ripzb (I think . The brain-scattering is enbiggened today). -- Dan Cash m. 0411 468 779 On Fri, 8 Dec 2023, 09:16 Alan Ingleby via ozdotnet, wrote: > bsky-social-vqjpx-ripzb > bsky-social-3g3ga-riozy > bsky-social-jctra-bhn5j > > > On Fri, 8 Dec 2023

Re: Many years ago

2023-12-07 Thread Alan Ingleby via ozdotnet
bsky-social-vqjpx-ripzb bsky-social-3g3ga-riozy bsky-social-jctra-bhn5j On Fri, 8 Dec 2023 at 07:07, mike smith via ozdotnet wrote: > Some more > > > > On Mon, Nov 6, 2023, 18:54 mike smith wrote: > >> We'd post invite codes for Gmail, when it was beta and invite only. >> >> Here's some bsky

RE: Conditional builds of arbitrary files

2023-12-04 Thread David Kean via ozdotnet
Awesome. I'll see ya at DDD. From: Greg Keogh Sent: Tuesday, December 5, 2023 2:30 PM To: David Kean Cc: ozDotNet Subject: Re: Conditional builds of arbitrary files Look at VS Text Templates, or we sometimes make use the C-preprocessor. Bingo! I'm a big fan of T4 templates and have used

Re: Conditional builds of arbitrary files

2023-12-04 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > Look at VS Text Templates, or we sometimes make use the C-preprocessor. > Bingo! I'm a big fan of T4 templates and have used them in anger in many projects ... but I didn't think of using them in this case. I just did a sanity check and it works. Thankfully someone published an example of how

RE: Conditional builds of arbitrary files

2023-12-04 Thread David Kean via ozdotnet
Look at VS Text Templates, or we sometimes make use the C-preprocessor. From: Greg Keogh via ozdotnet Sent: Tuesday, December 5, 2023 11:59 AM To: ozDotNet Cc: Greg Keogh Subject: Conditional builds of arbitrary files Folks, the MSBuild process provides Condition= and #if to provide lots of

Re: Blazor css overrides

2023-12-03 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > I recall doing something similar in the past but I believe I gave each > client their own entire css. So app.css by default OR use the client’s css > if the config value is passed (via querystring or whatever). > I was thinking of that as the best choice. If t=company is specified then I'll

Re: Blazor css overrides

2023-12-02 Thread Tony McGee via ozdotnet
It's not always the last selector that overrides previous ones. You're probably running into specificity issues from the original stylesheet, and the !important is nuking them from orbit, to be sure. Using !important isn't a great solution in general terms, but for this use case is probably

Re: Blazor css overrides

2023-12-02 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
I recall doing something similar in the past but I believe I gave each client their own entire css. So app.css by default OR use the client’s css if the config value is passed (via querystring or whatever). I don’t see a problem with using !important if it guarantees it and they do it always. If

RE: Blazor css overrides

2023-11-30 Thread David Kean via ozdotnet
I just use Chrome's css tools to tell me the order in which things are getting evaluated. From: Greg Keogh via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, December 1, 2023 3:51 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: Greg Keogh Subject: Blazor css overrides Folks, TGIF Our Blazor app has a simple classic shape with a local

Re: [OT] Angular training

2023-11-28 Thread Tom P via ozdotnet
Melbourne but we decided to go with online training Cheers Tom On Tue, 28 Nov 2023 at 22:27, DotNet Dude via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > What city? > > On Thu, 2 Nov 2023 at 12:28, Tom P via ozdotnet > wrote: > >> Hi folks >> >> Can anyone here recommend a good one on one in

Re: [OT] Identifying domain details

2023-11-28 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
Domain is still up so I’m assuming this is still in progress. I am interested in the outcome if you can reply to this thread if you remember mate. On Thu, 2 Nov 2023 at 15:23, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote: > Folks, I'm preparing the paperwork to take some fraudulent plumbers to the >

Re: [OT] Angular training

2023-11-28 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
What city? On Thu, 2 Nov 2023 at 12:28, Tom P via ozdotnet wrote: > Hi folks > > Can anyone here recommend a good one on one in person Angular accelerated > training program? > > Cheers > Tom > -- > ozdotnet mailing list > To manage your subscription, access archives:

Re: Minimal Web API code helper package

2023-10-30 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > I think the package you are looking for is Carter > > > > https://www.nuget.org/packages/Carter > > https://github.com/CarterCommunity/Carter > Folks, some quick feedback. Carter wasn't quite as attractive as I guessed. It adds too much of what I call "magic plumbing" and lots of fluent

Re: Minimal Web API code helper package

2023-10-18 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > I think the package you are looking for is Carter > > https://www.nuget.org/packages/Carter > > https://github.com/CarterCommunity/Carter > Yes thanks, that looks familiar. It doesn't look quite as *clever* as I recall, but I'll look into it anyway. I tried something vaguely similar myself

RE: Minimal Web API code helper package

2023-10-18 Thread Cameron Booth via ozdotnet
Folks, a couple of weeks ago I was watching a video where someone used a NuGet package in a minimal Web API project to change the plumbing slightly so that it was easier to code the endpoint methods. By default, the endpoint methods must be strictly coded and it's tricky to break them apart or

Re: AEC form

2023-09-15 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
LMAO. I had a mate who got a contract there several years ago and quit after a day or two after seeing the codebase. Some places cannot be saved! On Fri, 15 Sep 2023 at 19:33, Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > Whoever develops code for the AEC really needs to take a long

Re: AEC form

2023-09-15 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
:-) Dr Greg Low Director SQL Down Under Pty Ltd Office: 1300SQLSQL (1300775775) Mobile: +61419201410 About me: https://greglow.me From: David Connors via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, September 15, 2023 8:51:52 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: David Connors Subject: Re: AEC form

Re: AEC form

2023-09-15 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
I didn't think the government was handing IBM any more contracts ... On Fri, 15 Sept 2023 at 19:39, Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > It almost makes sense but there was no visible control on the form saying > that. And after fixing the captcha error and resubmitting, it

Re: AEC form

2023-09-15 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
It almost makes sense but there was no visible control on the form saying that. And after fixing the captcha error and resubmitting, it just worked. So the other one wasn't an error anyway. Bizarre. Regards Greg Dr Greg Low Director SQL Down Under Pty Ltd Office: 1300SQLSQL (1300775775)

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-08 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
Sent: Friday, September 8, 2023 11:02 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: David Connors ; Dr Greg Low Subject: RE: Blazor popularity and use Greg can you forward me some context? Can’t promise anything, but I probably have a better chance of landing on the right person’s desk. From: Dr Greg Low via oz

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-08 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
s became the default > language in the browser. > Scott Koon famously said, "JavaScript won by default. People wanted to > build better web applications. Programming against Flash movies > sucked. Javascript was already in all the browsers. If you're the last man > le

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-08 Thread Nathan Schultz via ozdotnet
lash movies sucked. Javascript was already in all the browsers. If you're the last man left on earth, it doesn't matter how ugly you are when the women come to re-populate the planet." But because it was the Lingua Franca it's not going away, even though the W3C opened the doors to everyone else wi

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-08 Thread David Kean via ozdotnet
Greg can you forward me some context? Can’t promise anything, but I probably have a better chance of landing on the right person’s desk. From: Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, September 8, 2023 2:24 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: David Connors ; Greg Low Subject: RE: Blazor popularity and use

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-08 Thread Tom Rutter via ozdotnet
Same from my experience. For intranet apps the supported browsers are made clear. Even for Internet facing apps the supported browsers are just the main ones so I very rarely see issues at all, particularly with using stuff like bootstrap etc. On Fri, 8 Sep 2023 at 14:52, Craig vN via ozdotnet

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Craig vN via ozdotnet
Unless you are required to deal with really old browsers (IE), then I just don't see this. I work on a site/app that has literally millions of users and we would spend less than 1% of the time on dealing with browser compatibility issues. On Fri, Sep 8, 2023 at 1:54 PM Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet <

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
(1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile SQL Down Under | Web: https://sqldownunder.com<https://sqldownunder.com/> | About Greg: https://about.me/greg.low From: Tony Wright Sent: Friday, September 8, 2023 2:38 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: David Connors ; Dr Greg Low Subject: Re: Blazor popu

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
get why there isn’t some Microsoft VP screaming at people to fix > it. I know I want to, and I’m a calm person. > > > > It’s gone on way too long. > > > > Regards, > > > > Greg > > > > Dr Greg Low > > > > 1300SQLSQL (1300 775 7

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
rs via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, September 8, 2023 1:55 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: David Connors Subject: Re: Blazor popularity and use On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 13:44, Dr Greg Low mailto:g...@sqldownunder.com>> wrote: Yep, we talk about browsers like there’s consistency there. There still isn’t. And

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Grant Maw via ozdotnet
:" If ease of development was our primary concern we would all be building Microsoft Access apps. " You cannot be serious. "Ease of development" and "MS Access" do not belong in the same sentence. On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 14:13, David Connors via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > On Fri,

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
DotNet ; David Connors Subject: Re: Blazor popularity and use I'm glad I'm not the only grumpy old fart in here! -- GK On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 13:44, Dr Greg Low mailto:g...@sqldownunder.com>> wrote: Yep, we talk about browsers like there’s consistency there. There still isn’t. And it’

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 13:44, Dr Greg Low wrote: > Yep, we talk about browsers like there’s consistency there. There still > isn’t. And it’s a huge hit on productivity. I see so much lost effort > trying to align pixels across different browsers, different versions of > browsers, etc. It’s just

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
vity is tragic. > > > > Regards, > > > > Greg > > > > Dr Greg Low > > > > 1300SQLSQL (1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile > > SQL Down Under | Web: https://sqldownunder.com | About Greg: > https://about.me/greg.low > > >

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Tony McGee via ozdotnet
Not so fast, Stockholm syndrome is comfy sometimes  https://world.hey.com/dhh/turbo-8-is-dropping-typescript-70165c01 https://devclass.com/2023/05/11/typescript-is-not-worth-it-for-developing-libraries-says-svelte-author-as-team-switches-to-javascript-and-jsdoc/ -T On 8/09/2023 13:05, Greg

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
gh via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, September 8, 2023 1:30 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: David Connors ; Greg Keogh Subject: Re: Blazor popularity and use Sure, deploying a web app to a server is easier than distributing thick client updates to many recipients, but that's a lucky side-effect. I stand by my

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 13:30, Greg Keogh wrote: > Sure, deploying a web app to a server is easier than distributing thick > client updates to many recipients, but that's a lucky side-effect. I stand > by my claim that the web browser is a woefully inadequate host for business > applications. >

RE: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
David Connors Subject: Re: Blazor popularity and use On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 12:06, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> wrote I must end on a sad note. ASP.NET<http://ASP.NET>, Blazor, JS, or whatever, all finish-up rendering in a web browser. It's tragic that th

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
Sure, deploying a web app to a server is easier than distributing thick client updates to many recipients, but that's a lucky side-effect. I stand by my claim that the web browser is a woefully inadequate host for business applications. I even have an example from today ... A Blazor app version

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
bwahaha, that just sounds like confirmation bias. The reason SSW might be seeing more Blazor is because that is what they are convincing their customers to use. But in terms of what is really happening out there, there are some stats around, such as the following: Most used web frameworks among

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
If demand *for SSW* to use Blazor is overtaking JS, then I'd believe it. I saw the statement made. I've never met a living person who uses Flutter, or the Dart language for that matter. It would be a brave decision to choose that as a development platform for the future. Does MAUI generate

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 12:06, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote > I must end on a sad note. ASP.NET, Blazor, JS, or whatever, all finish-up > rendering in a web browser. It's tragic that the ancient dumb web browser > is now the only host for web apps, and that we must attempt to present > serious

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
The only places I've ever heard of Blazor being used is . microsoft.com and this mailing list. We do Angular exclusively and see a lot of it in the wild from other dev at our client sites. On Fri, 8 Sept 2023 at 12:30, DotNet Dude via ozdotnet < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > I find it very

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
I agree. React demand is far higher than any other front end framework as far as I can see. Angular ticks all the corporate governance boxes but it is so unwieldy and requires so much boilerplate before getting to the business logic it has really lost the war. Most of it comes down to popularity.

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
I find it very hard to believe Blazor demand has overtaken JS. That’s an insane comment from Adam On Fri, 8 Sep 2023 at 12:05, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote: > Is anyone here actively using Blazor on a decent sized project? I used it >> for a while on my last contract but am unable to find new

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Grant Maw via ozdotnet
Yes, using it in a large project. Not hiring right now afaik though On Fri, 8 Sept 2023, 11:17 am Tom Rutter via ozdotnet, < ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> wrote: > Is anyone here actively using Blazor on a decent sized project? I used it > for a while on my last contract but am unable to find new work

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > Is anyone here actively using Blazor on a decent sized project? I used it > for a while on my last contract but am unable to find new work anywhere > that uses Blazor, not a single one! Compared to server-side ASP.NET and JS Frameworks, Blazor is a gift from heaven .. well ... sort-of.

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
We tried it with one small client about two years ago and it went well but couldn’t find any developers who wanted to use Blazor to expand to other projects. We mainly use Angular now On Fri, 8 Sep 2023 at 11:14, Tom Rutter via ozdotnet wrote: > Is anyone here actively using Blazor on a decent

Re: Blazor popularity and use

2023-09-07 Thread Dr Greg Low via ozdotnet
Yes several clients doing so. Will report back if they need anyone. Get Outlook for iOS From: Tom Rutter via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, September 8, 2023 11:13:58 AM To: ozDotNet Cc: Tom Rutter Subject: Blazor popularity and use Is anyone

RE: A real C++ vs C# story

2023-08-31 Thread David Kean via ozdotnet
day to debug dumps. From: mike smith via ozdotnet Sent: Friday, September 1, 2023 12:02 PM To: ozDotNet Cc: mike smith Subject: Re: A real C++ vs C# story Back then C++ wasn't so complex. The STL was in the process of being developed. Pentiums were state of the art On Fri, 1 Sept 2023, 10

Re: A real C++ vs C# story

2023-08-31 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
Back then C++ wasn't so complex. The STL was in the process of being developed. Pentiums were state of the art On Fri, 1 Sept 2023, 10:57 Greg Keogh via ozdotnet, wrote: > I have never understood the fixation with C++ unless you're in the >> business of writing kernels, device drivers,

Re: A real C++ vs C# story

2023-08-31 Thread Greg Keogh via ozdotnet
> > I have never understood the fixation with C++ unless you're in the > business of writing kernels, device drivers, embedded systems, etc. > The library we're phasing out was started around 1997, so you can throw the authors a bone because the world was very different back then. Your main

Re: A real C++ vs C# story

2023-08-31 Thread mike smith via ozdotnet
You really need to be generating the pdb files and storing them in a symbol server. If you want to view the source code associated with it, store that as well. For every build you want to be able to debug. I used to store it for all builds, and clean up later, because internal builds sometimes

Re: A real C++ vs C# story

2023-08-31 Thread David Connors via ozdotnet
I have never understood the fixation with C++ unless you're in the business of writing kernels, device drivers, embedded systems, etc. On Fri, 1 Sept 2023 at 08:44, Greg Keogh via ozdotnet wrote: > Folks, it's Friday and I have an anecdote to share before I return to > today's coding fiasco.

Re: [OT] Junked business registry overhaul blew out by $2.3b

2023-08-30 Thread DotNet Dude via ozdotnet
t; > > *From:* Greg Keogh via ozdotnet > *Sent:* Wednesday, August 30, 2023 11:15 AM > *To:* ozDotNet > *Cc:* Greg Keogh > *Subject:* Re: [OT] Junked business registry overhaul blew out by $2.3b > > > > Maybe we should set up OzDotNet Consultants specializing in governm

Re: [OT] Junked business registry overhaul blew out by $2.3b

2023-08-29 Thread Tony Wright via ozdotnet
It's a form of money laundering. Create a local project that you can inflate all the invoices on. The goal is to shift public "taxpayer" money into the hands of private operators, preferably your mates, and some of that money will "somehow" end up in your hands. Even better if you hire a company

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