By Peter Donker on
Wed, 29 Oct 2008 20:28:29 GMT
Bring2mind has released version 5 of its document management system for DotNetNuke: Document Exchange. New features include a second UI that is based on text-based templates. This will bring an unprecedented degree of configurability to the look and feel of the module.
|
By Peter Donker on
Tue, 21 Oct 2008 22:57:09 GMT
Update on latest DMX developments straight from the lab
|
By Peter Donker on
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 00:27:32 GMT
So much to tell and so little time. I was at OpenForce Europe in Noordwijkerhout (October 6 and 7) and didn't have the time to blog about it until now.
|
By Peter Donker on
Mon, 15 Sep 2008 10:34:31 GMT
|
By Peter Donker on
Thu, 04 Sep 2008 12:15:39 GMT
A rant of how I was kept at Amsterdam airport for a day and how KLM did not lift a finger to make it any easier on me
|
By Peter Donker on
Fri, 29 Aug 2008 16:26:03 GMT
|
By Peter Donker on
Sat, 26 Jul 2008 18:04:13 GMT
After many weeks of coding and testing I'm proud to announce the latest update of DMX 4: 04.03.00.
|
By Peter Donker on
Wed, 02 Jul 2008 12:25:10 GMT
Last week I had the opportunity to attend a workshop on the DNN scheduled task. I was there because I was giving a couple of presentations for my good friends at the SDN (http://www.sdn.nl). The workshop was given by Leigh Pointer and he showed us how to make a scheduled task as well as some ins and outs on how the scheduler is administered in DNN ...
|
By Peter Donker on
Thu, 29 May 2008 20:16:29 GMT
There has been some upheaval recently about the security of the DNN platform. One of the commercial entities in the DNN community saw fit to send out a communiqué how they discovered ‘numerous’ loopholes and how they could fix them. Aside from the fact that most claims were proven to be false, I’d like to go one step further and argue that DNN is in fact a very secure platform. I’ll start with an excerpt from an article I wrote that was published recently:
|
By Peter Donker on
Sun, 18 May 2008 21:15:33 GMT
Some of you will recognize this. A recurring pattern in DNN module support is to find out what the customer has running in the first place. Not just your own module (i.e. version), but also ‘the bigger picture’. There are ‘expert’ customers that will write you this in a first email, and there are those that have no clue what you’re asking them. Luckily most of my customers fall toward the expert category. Despite this I still spend a lot of time (emails back and forth) determining the client system. And regularly I have to ‘talk the customer through’ how to get those bits of information that are relevant to me (e.g. is Ajax enabled? Are you using compression? Do you have dll XYZ installed?)
Read More »
|