Thank you Jon! For years I was a voracious consumer of all the blogs and new information, these days I've lost a lot of my desire to learn all the new stuff, so these uploads are really helpful for me to at least stay abreast of everything in the world of .NET
The Urlist site, it would be good to at least have the HTML title element default to the date the page was made, if not have the form you use have a field to explicitly set it. When you bookmark a page, the bookmark name defaults to the title element, which, if i bookmark a couple of them and then when i go to go back to my book marks, it's a mystery what's what, all they say is "The Urlist"
Thank you for the summary, I cannot wait for C# explicit extensions, this is great. It would be even better to see union types in C# 14, who knows, maybe 🙂 Sidenote, I don't know, but whenever I see the "Github Copilot" phrase (for marketing purposes) it is like DHL would advertise themselves "we use stolen cars, and it is great". In other words, when you violate MS license it is criminal act "of course", but when MS/Github violates some individual license "oh, well, it is good for business". "OUR" business 😞,
Thank you Jon! For years I was a voracious consumer of all the blogs and new information, these days I've lost a lot of my desire to learn all the new stuff, so these uploads are really helpful for me to at least stay abreast of everything in the world of .NET
Thanks a lot Mr. Galloway
Thanks mate!
The Urlist site, it would be good to at least have the HTML title element default to the date the page was made, if not have the form you use have a field to explicitly set it. When you bookmark a page, the bookmark name defaults to the title element, which, if i bookmark a couple of them and then when i go to go back to my book marks, it's a mystery what's what, all they say is "The Urlist"
Thank you for the summary, I cannot wait for C# explicit extensions, this is great. It would be even better to see union types in C# 14, who knows, maybe 🙂 Sidenote, I don't know, but whenever I see the "Github Copilot" phrase (for marketing purposes) it is like DHL would advertise themselves "we use stolen cars, and it is great". In other words, when you violate MS license it is criminal act "of course", but when MS/Github violates some individual license "oh, well, it is good for business". "OUR" business 😞,
Ok