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Author: Peter Donker Created: Thu, 23 Nov 2006 23:32:19 GMT
Various thoughts and reflections that escape from the Bring2mind lab

We've returned from a great trip to Belgium and The Netherlands. Now it's time to get down to DMX 4 again.

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Last Friday (16th March) I had the pleasure of meeting my friends of the DNN community in France again. It has been a while since I saw them last and I extended and detoured a previously planned business trip so I could be there. The wife didn't seem to mind the extension. Instead, she opted to join me there so we could have a weekend in Paris. Not a bad idea ...

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You have to adjust a default DNN 4.4 installation for downloads to function correctly

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There is a bug in DNN 04.04.00 which will prevent DMX from working if the user is unauthenticated.

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So many new technologies are seeing the light of day at the end of this year, it's amazing ...

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Work is underway for a brand new version of DMX

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Since DotNetNuke (DNN) has introduced localization features, its popularity in Western European countries has significantly increased. This is based on observation from our sales and email inbox. Since its inception, DNN has been a mostly Anglophonic affair given the fact that all documentation and administration was English. The introduction of static localization allowing the translation of the management engine has changed this. It is now possible to roll out websites that are completely non-English.

However, one final hurdle remains: to be able to have truly multilingual sites. The current (3.1) DNN framework will allow for monolinguistic non-English sites, but not multilingual ones. The ability to have multilingual sites is especially important in countries that have more than one official language. Amongst these is , the country where Bring2mind is based.

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Module developers sometimes have the need to be able to detect important events that occur in the DNN Core. Until now the only way is to try and detect changes during code execution, but typically code execution happens during a page hit, so this would impede performance. The proposal outlines a way for the core to call modules’ business controllers to notify them of particular events.

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