Monday, December 15, 2003

note: I gave up on the webclient class and used Vick Soulios' VB FTP class on GotDotNet. It hangs for a few seconds when it's making the connection, but the upload works like a charm. Thanks Vick! But if someone can explain WHY the webclient.UploadFile was failing - translation ...what was I doing wrong...I'd love to know and share the answer.

I have been having some fun with the WebClient.UploadFile method for the last few days. My IIS Admin is joining in as well. According to the docs, this is the non asp.net way to emulate the HTMLInput file posting methodology. One advantage you have in asp.net is that if you are posting the file to the same domain, then it's easy enough to set the proper permissions to let this happen. However, when you are trying to do this from outside of the domain, it ain't so easy. IIS doesn't see a referral page, so it blocks the request. The only suggestion I have found anywhere is to bag the UploadFile and go with TCPClient and a network Stream. Sure I can do that if I have to, but then what's the purpose of the UploadFile? When I am setting the proper credentials using my ftp login and password, I can't see how this is any different than using a standard FTP app such as WS_FTP.

Another thing I have found in my queries is a number of people trying to upload files to web services. Someone always asks - “why on earth do you want to upload a file to a web service?” Now I know the answer! Because the web service will have all of the same authentication that the asp.net app does.

But I will figure out how to use the WebClient.UploadFile because now I'm determined to make it work and I'll definitely share the solution here.

If anyone was wondering what ever happened to BLInk!, my tablet blogging app, this (and work and some damned fine skiing snow) has been part of the holdup.

Monday, December 15, 2003 6:26:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, December 14, 2003

Seems like everyone's quickly willing to accept that it truly is Saddam they have captured. I'm a bit of a skeptic. Even my husband noted that he had one heck of a beard for only 9 months of not shaving. It is clearly an advantage politically to have us think that this is indeed Saddam - especially since he is suddenly being referred to as “the biggest terrorist on earth“ - but I will wait a bit longer. Remember that Saddam had a large number of look-a-like stand-ins that were used for public and televised/taped appearances.

add: I wasn't the only person to wonder about this... Though the raid occurred Saturday afternoon American time, U.S. officials went to great length to keep it quiet until medical tests and DNA testing confirmed Saddam’s identity. I guess by now, they are pretty sure.

Sunday, December 14, 2003 10:54:35 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, December 13, 2003

Gulp. Guess it's official. I'm only doing the talk once, but maybe they just wanted it to look like they've got lots of women speakers by putting me on that home page twice! Just kidding. There are at least two others that I can see. My task is to pack a laundry list of what's new in the Whidbey CLR into a very short period of time. I am still trying to decide if I should whiz through the list (boring), or just pick out my favorites and focus on them. I think a combo of those two would be the best - though timing will determine this. I'd also like to get a little into how these classes relate to WinFX. This is NOT the same as doing a talk on something you have great experience with - since it's all new stuff. But it's a great means of making sure I get my ass in gear!! :-)

Saturday, December 13, 2003 3:19:01 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

...when it's time to get out my ruby red slippers for hiking...

Anybody that I have ever met that has these boots (http://www.koflach.com/Koflach Degre) feels the same way about them. My magic boots.

Saturday, December 13, 2003 9:33:23 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

I noticde dasblog.com a few weeks ago and wondered why newtelligence was wasting their time with webhosting and since I hadn't seen an announcement, did not mention it myself. The real site for dasBlog is dasBlog.NET. This morning I see this from Clemens Vasters assuring us that this is just some unknown person using the dasBlog engine, but it is not associated with them (newtelligence) at all.

Saturday, December 13, 2003 8:46:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Friday, December 12, 2003

Well the time has come. I can put it off no longer.

My new hard drive is here. I have my win2k3 server software (msdn universal) and I have run out of space on my little server.

My two possible plans of action are this:

1) Install new drive as the slave drive. Copy the current drive completely to this new drive. The current system is win2k server wtih IIS5 (many test websites) and SQL Server 2000 on it. Once that is in place then I change that drive to the master drive and upgrade to Win2K3 server and hope all stays well.

2) Install new drive as master drive. Reformat it (just in case) and install Win2K3 server, SQL Server 2000 and IIS6. Install .NET Framework 1.1 and remote debugging tools. Then copy my databases and my websites over and recreate all of the virtual directories. Actually not all of them. Many are garbage tests that can disappear.

I know that MS recommends migration over upgrading, but I think in my envronment (I only have the server so that I have a good test environment to emulate my clients) a plain old upgrade might be sufficient.

I am not looking to the physical part of this - installing the drive, doing the master slave thing. I did that a few years ago on my development machine when I switched to a new hard drive and at the same time went from win2k to winxp. When you only do this stuff every 2 or 3 years, it becomes a mystery again.

The sadder part is that I have come to the conclusion that my dev machine is really just maxed out and could use more memory and a new processor. I've got a screamin' 160gig hard drive in there so that's no problem. I don't want to contribute to the computer graveyard so I'll probably just upgrade the box. I tried that a few years ago on my server and ended up having to get a new motherboard and a new case as well.

Friday, December 12, 2003 1:34:06 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, December 11, 2003

Stephen Forte asks if Reporting Services will be an Access Killer.

Of course we have all giggled about how it looks like Access for SQL Server. But it won't kill Access. Many people will not need or be able to justify the cost of a SQL Server license as well as [what I have been led to understand is] the current required design tool - Visual Studio .NET.

Based on Phil Scott's comment I should clarify that I am talking about situations where Access is already a viable tool - limited number of users and limited resources.

Thursday, December 11, 2003 9:34:27 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

From Mike Gunderloy

Longhorn Readiness Program for ISVs - The people who were unhappy to see the PDC Longhorn DVD shipping for $499 are going to be really unhappy to find out that it's now available for free.

Thursday, December 11, 2003 9:04:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Wednesday, December 10, 2003

I (and at least one other person that I am aware of) signed up for the reporting services beta about 3 weeks ago. It mentions a wait of a coupla days to hear back. I'm really eager to get a good look at it. So is my client who is considering the alternatives as well (hint hint). Any chance?

Wednesday, December 10, 2003 9:24:04 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

Today's NPR Commentary by the ever-enlightened and very entertaining poet, Andrei Codrescu, talked about blogging. I have been a fan of Codrescu's for years, though I can't say his take on blogging is too flattering! But that's okay by me. Listen here.

Commentator Andrei Codrescu talks about a spider in his backyard and how it relates to Internet web logs, or blogs. The blogger is at the center of a web, like a spider. Both eventually die -- from the cold or from being unable to pay the server's bill.

Wednesday, December 10, 2003 9:05:36 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

I received this email today (well this is a slice of it...). I hope this means good things to come!

The TabletPCDeveloper Web site is moving, and you can move with it!

On December 17, TabletPCDeveloper.com content will be moved to its well-established peer site GotDotNet.com.

You have received this notice because you are a registered user on the TabletPCDeveloper.com Web site. Part of the process of moving content to the GotDotNet site includes moving the TabletPCDeveloper user registration and related Samples. Unless you instruct us otherwise, on "moving day" (December 17), we will move your TabletPCDeveloper User Samples to their new home on GotDotNet. We will also automatically create a user account for you on GotDotNet (unless it appears that you already have one).

Wednesday, December 10, 2003 7:27:24 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, December 08, 2003

see Devin's post here for more information...

Monday, December 08, 2003 11:27:48 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

This article was featured in our local groovy weekly Seven Days this past week. It's not about the whole blog phenom around the DeanforAmerica campaign, but another aspect - the use of the meetups.com site to create Dean related gathering. It is as much a social computing phenomenon as what Dean has done with his blog. Meetups.com was hardly used before Michael Silberman got his hands on it. I wanted to point it out since Halley Suitt has been writing so much about the web side of Dean's campaign lately. Halley doesn't have comments so this was the best I could do...

Monday, December 08, 2003 11:11:09 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

Halley was here...and I missed her. Damn! Well getting into Burlington wasn't really an option over the weekend anyway with 2 1/2 feet of snow falling here. We did manage to drive 7 miles over the App Gap to get to Mad River Glen yesterday though of course. The parking lot was jam-packed so I'm sure many from Burlington made the trip. Over the mountain was interesting, to say the least.

(I have to confess that though I have her misbehaving.net blog in my aggregator, somehow her real blog wasn't. She was blogging about Vermont starting on Thursday and I missed all of them - aaargh! Of course, that's corrected now.)

Regarding this big storm that I have been so gleeful about, sadly there was a storm-related fatal accident north of Burlington where I used to live. A mother and her 15 year old daughter who were from Fairfax died in an accident on a road that I know well and is very hairy in bad weather. The roads were horrible and for some reason the 15 year old was driving.

 

Monday, December 08, 2003 8:58:24 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, December 07, 2003

I have noticed a pattern that when I have worked on a WinForms project for a while (weeks...months) and then start on a new ASP.NET project, I have two problems:

1) I forget about the darned postback. It takes a couple of “hey where'd my value go?” to do one of those “could've had a V-8” D'OH forehead slaps.

2) I don't notice that the fact that new web form pages are in grid mode is an issue. I start placing controls on the page where I want them until this nagging thought in the back of my head says “something is not right with this picture”. Oh yeah - it's not a windows form, I want flow layout mode. I know that there is a nice little message with really subtle faint grey text when you create a new web form - but do YOU read it? I don't. Happily this default is changing in Whidbey.

I should have a mechanism that kicks in when I create a new Web App project that pops up a window with big red letters and maybe even a little bell that reminds me of these two things.

Sunday, December 07, 2003 5:46:44 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, December 06, 2003

Boy “catastrophic”... Sounds pretty horrible, huh? It's really just a little problem created by Win2000 SP4 if that SP is implemented before installing ASP.NET on a remote server. This was my case because I only recently (finally) put .NET 1.1 on my in-house webserver.

So anyway, I didn't waste too much time with my little “catastrophy” before I just hit google, got to KBAlertz which had the MSDN solution listed. Here:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;Q827559

This is surely old news, but it was new to me so I thought I'd just stick it in here.

Saturday, December 06, 2003 6:55:53 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

I just pulled a login page from an ASP.NET app I wrote last year into a new ASP.NET application. These are applications that live on my domain that are web based utilities for some of my clients or just myself and I haven't had to write one in quite some time. When I opened up the login page I saw something that I had put in there which I had completely forgotten about. I had written a login web service that I can implement in any of my applications. I have one table in my domain's sql database that has the logins for users of my various little applications. That way I can use the same login page in any of these applications. The web service requires authentication before it will even attempt to validate the user login/pw. That way I don't have to worry about anyone else using my web service.

So here is the  code I discovered (yes, I surprised myself!)

Private Sub LogIn_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.Web.UI.ImageClickEventArgs) Handles ImageButton1.Click
 Dim sResults As Boolean
 Dim auth As New mydomain.Authenticator() 
 auth.UserName = "IAmanAuthenticatedApplication"  
 auth.Password = "IAmThePassword"
 Dim objService As New mydomain.WebServices()
 Try
 With objService
  
.AuthenticatorValue = auth 'this attaches the auth object as SOAP
   .Credentials = System.Net.CredentialCache.DefaultCredentials
   sResults = .ValidLogin(Me.txtLogin.Value, Me.txtPW.Value)
 End With
 If sResults Then
  
Dim FormsAuthentication As New Web.Security.FormsAuthentication()
   FormsAuthentication.RedirectFromLoginPage(txtLogin.Value,
False)
 Else
  
msg.Text = "Invalid User: Please try again“
 End If
 Catch ex As Exception
   msg.Text = ex.Message & vbCrLf & ex.StackTrace
 End Try
End Sub

This may not be the best way (and it makes me nervous to have my code available for certain people to possibly look at and have a chuckle) but it's darned useful.

It's funny to look at this having just written a little about Indigo going to message based transactions. Because doesn't that mean that my little “auth” object that I'm passing in to my webservice will go away? Of course! This is what they (ok Don Box but I'm not going for google hits, here) were talking about when saying that even security is going to be a LOT less complicated to handle. I remember when I first tried to get my head around how all of that was working - soap , my authentication object, etc. Though it all seems so obvious to me now, I remember how incredibly confusing it was for me back then.

Saturday, December 06, 2003 5:39:59 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

(edited this because there seemed to have been a little drag and drop action that messed up my original post, oops...)

I'm always interested to see what Sam Gentile and Robert Hurlbut are working on together. Always BIG projects that seem to have the scope of large architectural blueprints which demand that they dig deep into the roots of the tools and languages they are working with. My projects are so teeny in comparison and I don't touch half of the tools that they talk about.

Today Sam writes about a “grand managed (.NET) distributed architecture for one of my clients and my team that will take the next 18-24 months to do and deploy.” Wow, THAT is impressive. And also that he and Robert converted all of their build processes to NAnt this weekend. NAnt is a frequently blogged about tool that builds your .NET projects rather than letting Visual Studio .NET build them -- and there is a new release out. I haven't spent time with it, but I am guessing it allows you to have more granular control over the build.

Sam has teased me about the fact that I have mentioned this before - that I'm impressed. There's also a (small) part of me that would like to be involoved in projects like that. I say small because they sound daunting! “It's all just programming” he has told me. I guess that I get to play with new stuff too, such as working with tablet applications. But I just don't have some of the big challenges in my projects that these guys are out to solve. So all of this stuff that people do down deep is really impressive to me, that's just the way it is and the way it will remain.

Also, Sam talks about ShadowFax which let's you do in .NET today what Indigo will be bringing us tomorrow. This was one of the big buzz concepts at PDC - that we will move from object oriented design to service oriented architecture which is message based. It's awesome to keep having these messages constantly coming in (via blogs of people who are really out on the edge) so that when I'm ready to start playing with that stuff (which I am not at the moment) I won't be totally clueless.

Saturday, December 06, 2003 5:08:48 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

I have not been able to stop thinking about this. Fellow blogger, Liz Lawley, who I admire a lot, wrote yesterday about a recent terrible tragedy in her family. Her sister's new husband (of 6 months) was killed in a head-on collision when the driver of the other car swerved into his lane because she was busy doing something to her bagel. Think about that next time you are drving while...[searching for a better radio station/eating your lunch/talking on the phone/settling a kids fight in the back seat/checking your email/trying to dial a phone #, etc.]. Pull over if you need to be so distracted for god's sake. Although I start to cry every time I think about this, I also have some sympathy for the girl (driver of the other vechicle) who just wasn't using her head - but now has to live with the horror of what she is responsible for for the rest of her life. It's too high of a price for everyone to have paid. And I am just as guilty of this type of occasional inattentiveness as most people.

Saturday, December 06, 2003 11:23:38 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  | 

I haven't done this myself yet, but as per Clemens:

The Releases section over at the GotDotNet workspace has three variants of v1.5:

"Source ZIP" with the code, "Web Files" with the runtime files (to update existing installs and do manual installs) and "Web Setup" which is an MSI to install the web site. Because the feature list keep growing, but we haven't done a language update for the various local languages, yet, updates to the string tables are welcome in the workspace source control system. And before you update: make a backup.

I am running v1.5 here without any problems. Let us know in the GotDotNet workspace message boards if you find any. I likely won't be able to answer any support questions this or next week.

Please note that you must not have the Whidbey Alpha version of ASP.NET mapped to the web into which you install this version; it can be present on the box, but not on the web for dasBlog. Otherwise you will get all sorts of assertions and error messages that aren't my fault ;)

Saturday, December 06, 2003 11:01:52 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [0]  |