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微軟被更新的FastCGI -,但應該您升級?

我們 早先蓋 IIS FastCGI模塊的最後的發行,聯合被開發在微軟和Zend之間… 但這個星期,微軟(MSFT: $33.76 -0.50%) 宣佈 可及性 RTM IIS FastCGI模塊。

那麼怎么回事? 我們下載了,順便說一句,是的新發行( 沒有 與老一個,您兼容必須然後卸載安裝新版本)并且檢查了版本號在\窗口\ System32 \ inetsrv \ fcgiext.dll -它出來是6.1.36.1。

相反,我們下載并且安裝一個月前(似乎取了綽號現場發行)被檢查并且被發現7.0.6001.16606的版本。

現場發行明顯地使用編號從微軟視窗服務器2008發行,但它有我們被混淆。

點擊持續讀「微軟被更新的FastCGI -,但如果您升級?」

寫由計算機權威 2007年11月15日沒有評論.
讀更多文章 FastCGI 并且 IIS 并且 微軟 并且 回顧 并且 窗口 并且 軟件.

窗口景色: 4種方式顯示

在我通常衝浪期間,我遇到了使能4種方式顯示,像Ubuntu的立方體顯示,我們您使用四虛擬桌面計算和這樣的一更加有生產力的天的一種涼快的自由應用。 我知道這不是扭動,但是它是,很涼快我立刻下載了它并且嘗試了它。 它是樂趣,並且幫助我得到最不動產我的桌面,并且顯示器可能抽瘋,因為我的雙重顯示配置得到位擁擠。 我設法試驗在此,并且它是使我打開我可以在一天處理的更多應用,加上它是涼快的看并且給我平靜。
出去這網站檢查它,我是肯定的您將喜歡。 得到震動4way

震動4Way 3D提供4個虛屏。 It´s特別有用為筆記本用戶和那些與小顯示器。 這個版本是OpenGL編輯。

寫由PC畸形人 2007年11月9日沒有評論.
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FastCGI for IIS Final Released, Congratulations to the IIS Team!

Congratulations are in order for Microsoft’s IIS development team - today they’ve just announced the public availability of the final version of the IIS-FastCGI ISAPI Extension - a long-awaited and much-improved way of running just about any open-source scripting engine on IIS, safely and quickly.

This FastCGI module for IIS 5.1, 6, and 7 (with Windows Vista and Server 2008) have been in the works for quite a while now, and we’ve been using them since the first beta release - they’re good. While the biggest benefit will be seen in using FastCGI w/ IIS7 to take advantage of the new kernel-mode caching, it’s still a huge improvement over the old way of running scripting engines for languages like PHP on Windows.

The Problem: Most open-source scripting engines like PHP and Ruby on Rails were initially developed on/for the *nix world. On Unix-based platforms, the easiest way of creating multi-threaded applications is just to run the same app twice or more (The CGI model). On Windows, that doesn’t work out so well, because it takes a lot more resources to create another process. So these engines released Windows-specific single-process multi-threaded engines; the only problem was, they weren’t stable. Too many race conditions in some very non-thread-safe code wreaked havoc on many Windows systems, with the PHP developers themselves giving “Stability on IIS” the lowest level of concern.

Click to continue reading "FastCGI for IIS Final Released, Congratulations to the IIS Team!"

Written by Computer Guru on October 10th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on FastCGI and IIS and Servers and Web Development and php and Windows and Reviews and Microsoft and software.

Windows XP SP3 Beta (Build 3205) Released - Analysis Included

Following our coverage of the Windows XP SP3 beta leak almost a month ago in August, here’s some more info on the official beta, which just had its first authorized distributable released earlier today. Say hello to Windows XP SP3, build 3205!

While the newly-released build and the one leaked a month ago (Build 3180) may share the same name, we can exclusively reveal that they are not identical releases. This release, also shipped as windowsxp-kb936929-sp3-x86-enu.exe, is 334.2 megabytes and has been made available to tier-one Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista SP1 beta testers. Hashes are as follows:

CRC: 56e08837
MD5: c8c24ec004332198c47b9ac2b3d400f7

Along with the standalone installer redistributables (in English, Japanese, and German), Microsoft also provided the usual release notes and a list of all the hotfixes included in this release. Contrary to popular belief, Windows XP SP3 does ship with all-new features - not just patches and hotfixes, most of them backported from Windows Vista:

Click to continue reading "Windows XP SP3 Beta (Build 3205) Released - Analysis Included"

Written by Computer Guru on October 7th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Operating Systems and Windows XP SP3 and Microsoft and Reviews and Security and Windows and software.

Internet Explorer 7 “Updated” - But Not Really…

Steve Reynolds, program manager of the Internet Explorer development team, has just announced an “update” of sorts to Internet Explorer 7 a year or so after its original release in 2006. Never mind the fact that we were promised regular updates and that “Internet Explorer 7 won’t be like IE6″ with regards to lack of new features and updates, what’s up with the list of the things that have changed with this new version!? Have a look for yourself at the “changelog:”

  1. No need for WGA verification in order to get Internet Explorer 7
  2. The menu bar is now visible by default.
  3. The Internet Explorer 7 online tour has updated how-to’s. Also, the “first-run” experience includes a new overview.
  4. We’ve included a new MSI installer that simplifies deployment for IT administrators in enterprises. Learn more about it here.

Interesting… Here’s our take on these “updates”

  1. It really shouldn’t have required WGA in the first place - Microsoft (for some odd reason) guarantees users of pirated versions of Windows “immediate” access to any security-related patches, upgrades, and hotfixes. Doesn’t Microsoft tout Internet Explorer 7 as a security-prioritized upgrade?
  2. Noooo! We love the hidden menu bar! It’s clean, it’s clutter-free, and it gives IE7 a great look. Obviously the reason they’ve put it back is that users had trouble getting the menu to show (hint: press `alt` to make it appear), but who actually uses the menu bar anyway?! At least make it a first-run option… please? Sure, you can make it hidden again by flicking a switch in the options panel, but that’s just so wrong on so many levels…
  3. Not exactly what we’d call an upgrade to Internet Explorer itself so much as it is an improvement to the external documentation. It’s just a file hosted on MS servers that users can opt to view.
  4. Nothing more than an upgrade to the packaging/deployment for Internet Explorer 7, albeit a most-welcome one for sysadmins and software integrators everywhere.

Click to continue reading "Internet Explorer 7 “Updated” - But Not Really…"

Written by Computer Guru on October 4th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Microsoft and Development and Internet Explorer and Beta and Windows and Reviews and software.

Outsourcing Your Documents to Scribd and Gaining Exposure

Web 2.0 is about sharing stuff. No need to repeat that any more than it’s already been said. But for many “Web 2.0″ sites/services out there, sharing is really the only thing they do. For instance, when you don’t really get anything by uploading a video to Metacafe or YouTube - you just share. But Scribd, the Web 2.0 “startup” (It’s been there for a while now…) for sharing text is a bit more than that. When you post content to Scribd, you tend to benefit in exchange.

When you upload a document to Scribd (which accepts almost all popular formats like OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, PDF, PowerPoint, and more), it’s automatically converted to .doc, .pdf, and .txt - and it comes with a converted-to-audio MP3 version as well. But most importantly - it’s a hell of a lot more convenient for your readers.

While you can embed a self-hosted video in your blog and have it streamed to your readers with little to no effort, inline and all, it’s a lot more complicated (rather, impossible) to embed a binary-encoded text file in a post or article. With Scribd, you can instantly embed a document like this:

Click to continue reading "Outsourcing Your Documents to Scribd and Gaining Exposure"

Written by Computer Guru on October 2nd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Blogosphere and Scribd and SEO and web 2.0 and Reviews and software.

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