Tuesday, December 7, 2010

TASABA REGISTRATION FORMS

All the Tanzanians student who have not yet registered their names into the forms offTASABA please do that immediately because we want to take the statistics and to send them to our High Commission in Delhi for our own security and support from our government submit your forms to the following people if you have not take it from them:
kamannahali - Vince Nkini,Anase stephen,Hamisi fintan
Hennur -Kibakaya Miraji
Acharya-Hamisi fupi
Indiranagar-Deogratius Rweyemamu
Gubi-Joseph Nanyaro,Jessica Gonzavels
Horamavu -Jimmy Cassian and Jerome
Koramangala -Ulaki
Banaswadi-Susan Odrianp.
Kumaraswamy-Jumanne Mtambalike
Magadi- Juster

Sunday, November 21, 2010

practice2



For a lot of us is easy to do the design in Adobe Photoshop and then do the 2D animation in Adobe Flash now Adobe has made easier for us to transfer file from PSD to FLA so that we can animate only in flash and do all our design in Photoshop by these simple stapes.

Go to file at the middle of the drop down menu you will see an option [import] select it and several other option will appear select [import to stage] after that a pop-up window will appear which will allow you to trace the location of your PSD file in the computer ready to transfer it into FLA.

Your advised during your design arrange your layers and folders in a proper way so it is easy to adjust when importing into different tools available in Flash.For more tutorials on Adobe products click here

practice 1




One of the first things to note is that Visual Studio 2010 allows you to write code against multiple versions of the .NET Framework and CLR; this means that, even if you still need to work on .NET 3.X or 2.0 code, you can upgrade from Visual Studio 2008 to Visual Studio 2010 and still be able to work on .NET 3.X applications and .NET 2.0 applications.

Some of the features in Visual Studio 2010 and .NET 4 that look really useful are:

IntelliTrace, which allows you to “rewind” the application to debug
Multiple monitor support (it’s about time)
Vastly improved debugging for parallelism
Significantly improved support for XAML
Better support for jQuery and other client-side technologies
Local Team Foundation Server installations (this is awesome for lone developers or developers in small shops)
Parallel Extensions Library
F# built into the system

Brian Hitney, a Microsoft Developer Evangelist who mainly works with ASP.NET. He told me that it is much more pleasant to work in ASP.NET in Visual Studio 2010. Something he said that stuck out is, “you don’t feel like you’re fighting the system.” One reason why I never really liked ASP.NET much is that it always felt like I was fighting the system to do what I wanted it to do. Brian pointed out that in ASP.NET 4, you can finally control the IDs that WebControls get, and the web.config files are much smaller and manageable now.

Tim Huckaby, an MVP and the CEO of InterKnowlogy, a company that specializes in WPF applications. He had some interesting insights to share, since his perspective is that of someone who is using cutting edge technologies in real-world scenarios. He drove home that the WPF and Silverlight story is totally changed now; there is substantially less need for Blend, and you can do applications that use the basics of XAML without Blend at all (Visual Studio 2008 supported XAML, but did not have a good visual designer).

In addition, Visual Studio 2010 ships with the Metro theme, which is what Windows Phone 7 uses. This means that you can start writing apps today that will look like apps will look on Windows Phone 7; this is great news if you are planning on supporting Windows Phone 7 when it releases. He also stated that it is much easier to work with WCF.

Tim mentioned that Visual Studio 2010 is much, much better at working with SharePoint; in fact, there is no longer a separate SharePoint development tool. While I have never worked with SharePoint on the development side, I’ve noticed that SharePoint development has quietly become a huge market in the last few years.

Visual Studio is also the first version to ship since ASP.NET MVC, ADO.NET Data Services (aka OData), Silverlight, and a whole host of other technologies have been released. In the past, support for these other technologies was spotty, in CTP status, or non-existent; now, Visual Studio supports them. If you pay attention to Microsoft’s releases, they tend to follow a pattern of “revolution” followed by “consolidation of gains.” For example, Windows Vista changed the playing field with Aero, WPF, UAC, and a lot of other new technologies. Windows 7 refined Windows Vista and made it useful and usable. In the same vein, I always felt that some of the new technologies in Windows Vista, .NET 3.X, and Visual Studio 2008 were not well supported, implemented, or documented. Well, now it seems to be there, and properly too.

Another important note is that there is no longer the division of Visual Studio into Team editions; there is simply the Ultimate Edition, which combines all of the functionality that the Team editions had into one package. Speaking of editions, Microsoft is still offering Express editions for folks looking to experiment for free with .NET.
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