You can use your iPod wherever you want, but you can only synchronize your iPod from one machine. However, since you can use the iPod has a regular Firewire hard drive, you can use it to ferry those MP3s from one machine to another, then synchronize from there.
With a 10-hour battery life, you could walk a marathon and not miss a beat.
Web Service SublimationFor the record, messages should be typed, described in XSD, and as loosely coupled as possible -- as specified in their XSD definitions.Excelent article. Consisely captures the history and tradeoffs.
One sentence in particular captures the debate that Don Box and I started over beers last week. If they [are] described with another technology, like Java, the promise of interoperability based on XML technologies will be lost. Exactly. My feeling is that a one-to-one and onto mapping of XML schema to any pre-existing language is neither possible nor desirable. So while the approach of having metadata associated with a class definition define the serialization is effective for most situations, I still believe that .NET remoting and/or ASP.NET need to have a mechanism for allowing an individual service to augment or override this. Simon agrees. As we left it, Don remained unconvinced.
As Tim Ewald (one of the co-authors of this XML.com article) said at last week's DevCon, everyone starts from their own language/platform and works towards the middle and hopes we'll all get to the same place. No successful API was ever defined that way.
The Next Computer Interface. The desktop metaphor was a brilliant innovation—30 years ago. Now it's an unmanageable mess, and the search is on for a better way to handle information. [Technology Review - Software]
10:43:55 AM
[Macro error: The server, 127.0.0.1, returned a SOAP-ENV:Client fault: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "channeltitle" hasn't been defined.]