пятница, 8 февраля 2013 г.

книга турбо паскаль

Alive is a performance counter monitor hosted on ASP.NET. You use it to get a dashboard on how your production environment is doing.

My name is Mikael Lundin and I'm the author of the content on this blog. If you want to get in touch with me you easily do it on twitter, or e-mail

[...] common search term for this blog is Turbo Pascal, that I’ve mentioned once (now twice) in my personal history of computing. I will attempt to honor that by posting a small beginners guide to [...]

Beginners guide to Pascal « Mint

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As I studied computer science at Stockholm around 2005, there was a choice to be made between Java or .NET technologies. Since all my friends and close relations were Microsoft haters, I choose .NET as a platform because I wanted to experience something new. I was astounded by the ease of getting started with C# and I felt I could be productive right away. Today I work mainly with ASP.NET 3.5 web apps and is quite happy with that. It would be interesting working on a heavy client software application sometime, but I like the problems that web applications present. Heavy integration and scalability with thousands of users. I feel very flexible, so who knows what technology I'll be working with tomorrow. Maybe Ruby, F# or Scala?

Nineteen years old I moved from my parents house to my own apartment where I spent the nights building my own and the days learning Lisp at . It was a fascinating language and the school had a fascinating nerd culture. Infinite recursions made my head spin and in the evenings I would do some relaxing PHP3 coding, creating communities that were totally unmaintainable. I also had a short fling with Java, but the compiler errors made me irritated. Especially after a short course in ADA with compiler errors like 'You misspelled your method name in line 123.'

At twelve of age I sit at home during the summer on my fathers work laptop (Cyrix 586), playing he lumps a thick book in my knee. - It is time for you to learn how to write your own games, he says, and I start the long and tedious task of learning . After 6 months I had written a music library that used a linked list of structs for in memory handling and could both save and load the library from disc. Debugging linked lists was something I would get back to 12 years later as I was relearning this in my university studies.

My family bought a computer for the first time in 1988. I was six years old, home alone with my mom and I badly wanted to play those funny games that I were playing the day before. Though, my mom did not know how to operate the computer and I was not allowed, the urge got too much and I decided to give it a try. I had seen the procedure before and I knew what to do. I had just never done it myself. So, I flipped the power switch and waited for the screen to show Heart was pounding in 200 bpm as I selected the disc that should play my favourite game ( ). I inserted it into the floppy and the game started to load.

litemedia - My history of computing

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