Just a few days remain until the official unveiling of our 2013 Q1 release. Be the first, to take a glimpse into the pack of hot stuff we baked for you.
We are releasing Q1 2013 within days and many of you have already asked what’s coming with Telerik OpenAccess ORM? That's why I've decided to shed some light on how the new version will help you achieve your goals even quicker than the previous ones.
The modern perception of a chart’s behavior, performance, and visualization abilities are changing rapidly. New, easier to interpret charts, maps and geo visualizations are finding their way into becoming a standard for every business application. Rendering performance is becoming a key aspect. End-users are demanding new ways of interaction, such as interactive filtering and drilling of data.
The change is happening now and Telerik Reporting will help you stay on top of the latest technology with its new OLAP charting engine.
A few weeks back, Jonathan Sampson noted that testing the HTML5 AppCache feature is a bit of a pain. One reason is that, in IE10, putting the browser into Work Offline mode is ineffective—the browser will detect that a network connection is available and exit the Work Offline mode automatically.
If you've been following me on Twitter you've probably watched a few of my trials and successes in getting PHP up and running on my computer. It's been fun digging in to something that I haven't used in 13+ years. PHP has certainly changed a lot since...
As a member of the Sitefinity team, Rich Text (WYSIWYG) web editors are literally the core of my world. These tools are the pipe through which most web content flows. They allow people—who know nothing about the HTML—to create HTML. However, the sad truth is that most WYSIWYG editors are worse than awful. In fact, I heard one CMS analyst refer to them as the “Achilles’ heel of CMS.” Frequently buggy, they’re renowned for allowing atrocious HTML to spill into the website.
This blog post not only shows how to store to local or roaming folders, but it also creates a complete Data Repository to demonstrate one powerful way of managing data.
Fiddler’s Inspectors have the choice of displaying either the relative or absolute URL in the Request Line. Displaying the absolute URL simplifies request tampering, while displaying only the relative path more closely replicates what servers actually receive.