Graphic Design Blog > How-To’s Day - 2005-03-31 Tutorials

[The Magazine Design Weblog - magazinedesign.weblogsinc.com _] How-To’s Day is a regular feature of the Design Weblog in which we give you five highly useful how-to tutorials—four from around the Web, and one created specifically for you by yours truly. How-To’s Day is the first, third, and, if there is one, fifth Tuesday of every month.

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Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.

[Say what?! Say something.] prIde: But this past Tuesday I was staying late to help with some stuff in our studio, and I actually remembered the guitar lesson. At 5:40 the guy I was helping turned to me and said, "Don't you need to go?" And I just said, "Nah, it's not a big deal." Then, when we finish and I go back to my office, I hear a slightly annoyed but mostly concerned voicemail from the kid's mom. And I did nothing.

[Weird thing of the day] Weird thing of the day 26 May 2005/17 'Iyyar 5765 (Day 32 of the `Omer): Oh, nevermind, you will never understand the power and the beauty of your planet until after the Empire has destroyed it in a futile attempt to find the Rebel Base. But trust me, in twenty years, you will look back at photos of your home and recall, in a way you can't grasp now, how blissfully ignorant you were, and how fabulous your planet really looked before it was a pile of burning space rubble. Your planet is not as dull as you imagine.

[recyclemysoul.com] No shit!: Eventually the crisis was averted, one of the directors raided the hotel supply closet and found enough for the building. Later, I heard that the reason we ran out for the main area was because Facilities cancelled the toilet paper shipment that was to arrive before the weekend started, and rescheduled it to the Tuesday after Memorial Day.

[Howtolive.blogspot.com] How to Live: . The very name suggests imagination (why, indeed, "blue man"?) that belies the fact it is actually a little more than a roadside stand, offering deep-fried nuggets of chicken. Mark used to take me for dinner to the old stand near St. Paul's, where we would dine on either deliciously fried breast or drumstick, in darkness. (They had no electricity, only quaint candles.) Today, they have transferred near my pad along Aldecoa Drive (otherwise known as Laguna Silliman), with a tiny (and well-lit) sitting room with three tables. The chicken is still the same, perhaps even more delicious. And intriguing, because it is so ordinary, reminding me of the fried chicken Mother used to make for me when I was a kid. The chicken has a certain crunchiness to it, and the meat is tantalizingly soft for something that is fried.

Fairvue.comhttp://www.fairvue.com [Fairvue.com] Weblog Wannabe: trying hard to be like yours: Because ripping off only one weblog design is so 1990's! Anyway, those 10 weblogs whose pieces of design we (Nikolai and I) have so lovingly stolen are Fairvue Central (if it counts *grins*), Barbelith, Megnut, Hit-or-Miss.org, obviously Kottke.org, Digital Swirlee, Saturn.org, M3tacubed, Prolific, and Evhead. Nikolai compiled and put together all the stolen pieces. All I did was telling him which weblogs I love designwise and/or contentwise.

[Blogforfunandprofit.blogware.com] How To Blog For Fun & Profit! :: How To Blog Video Tutorials: A CMS allows you to easily publish to a website and manage content without having to deal with having to know how to program code. Blog publishing software provides you with a graphical user interface (GUI) for point and click publishing of your content. Your blog software will require you to perform intial easy-to-do setup and configuration so that it will know how to automically organize your published content in the future. After that, you can publish quickly and instantly using your blog software editor that is built into your blog publishing software.

Blogs.msdn.com[Blogs.msdn.com] .Net Security Blog : Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - Posts: With Whidbey, we've enhanced the X.509 certificate support available in the framework, and you can now open an X.509 certificate stored in a file into an X509Certificate2 object directly by passing in the path to the PFX file and a SecureString as a password.  Then you'll be able to use the PrivateKey property of the certificate to get the signing key.  For a sample of what this might look like, check out the section on X.509 Support in the article Mike Downen and I wrote for November's MSDN magazine.

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