Declic Video wrote
Unfortunately not working for me it seems. But that should be a "personnal problem" due to my config or IE or something else.
But I admit that it is VERY SATISFACTORY to see that people are still investigating and Locopon with John are dedicated to this problem and trying to solve it. Congratulations guys !
I must admit that it is just great. Now, I will jump to the thread and I will do exactly what he is asking me to do to solve the problem. ;-)
DV FX
PS: That's funny, because I repeat to everybody on video forum: "Do not install the first x.0 version, it is always buggy... Wait for the next one. And here, I jump in the hole, thinking it will improve my DNN, I upgraded....
I do not think anyone here in the forums who has used DNN is hostile towards the Core teams. But... In forums as one Benefactor noted people can read into words more or less than the original poster is trying to state. This especially is the case with "excitables". So one's been working hard on program code, testing on and on... Then some Joe/sephine comes in and says things that are upsetting to those developers. The developers see the user as at best uniformed and not skilled in the arts of engineering.
But! Both parties have (or may have) valid points. An end user should never need wrestle a release candidate when it comes to it and core modules. These should have been thoroughly beaten' upon by a several Beta teams before a release.
Unfortunately (and I do it too!!!!) developers code, test, run code against production code... All seems fine, unto the next thing... over and over. Then, release. Then the users start going, "Blah blah blah!!!!". The best way to get rid of this syndrome are to make sure that high traffic sites with webmasters who will pound the beta code are reporting back to a lead, who tries and work through the problem(s). If he/she cant, it goes to core. Those webmasters sites need use the core projects only, no Billy Bob's Forms Engines allowed.
I not so fondly remember working with QMI Inc. on a product for the old Atari ST computers. I'd put in GOBS of hours on it as of the three of us developing the software I was the only guy who knew assembly language... So I was working my little fingers to the bone with 68000 assembler. I get it all done, run code against it simulating. Looks good. It was in fact the first "ROM cartridge" ever made for the Atari ST series of PC's.
Anyways... I get it all done and that weekend we all get together at QMI HQ. Lead engineer asks me, "All set"... I went, "Yup!" and commenced to spew all the immenities and wonders of my hand tuned/coded assembler! Tootin' my hoot! LOL
He walks up to the computer and literally just slammed his two hands down across the keyboard pressing whatall, 70 keys all at once... two three four times in a row... And there sits my code locked up tight as a drum LOL. I never considered someone just overrunning the keyboard buffer in my "interrupt processing" code. Easy fix, but rather red-faced rosey cheeked.
Assembly language is a lost art (how sad).
Anyways... point being, we all know bugs exist in software. We all know that in diverse computing environments we can end up with diverse results. I do not think anyone is "faulting" the DNN team. I am a programmer and I am an "optimizer" type, in other words non-traditional code mechinisms that end up running rings around traditional algorythms. I'm the cat who gave Mike Abrash (master optimizer) the skivvy on how to make Quake line drawing WHIZ along for example. Knowbody ever thought of it back then, but I'd had coded it up for the Atari ST in ST Lightning (a 80% faster graphics kernel than the machine shipped with).
DNN's core code that I have examined is excellent. I can tell. If it were not impressive I'd not be wasting my time. Its the kind of toy I really like getting into the guts of. I do not presently have the skill set Shaun or Joe or Mike have. I'm rather .net .new and have been spending many .nights going .nuts learning all this .new .net stuff transitioning to VS 2005.
I for one appreciate what these guys have accomplished and hope and some point in time I can be of help. Until then perhaps some of what I am saying might be helpful?
.nuff said.