Since ASP.NET 1.0 you had the ability to toggle the visibility of any HTML tag with the runat=”server” attribute.
CES – Marketing in the Age of Control
Sunday night Bill Gates shared his vision of the future to kickoff the Consumer Electronics Show – and focus attention during the annual gadget-fest on the role of Microsoft’s Vista in how consumers will be using electronics and technology in the coming year.
Sun Gets Press, Maintains Control
So, the news is official: (and yes, I agree with IBM’s question as to why Sun didn’t join one of the community projects focused on delivering open source implementations of Java SE, ME and EE instead of trying to build their own community.)
ASP.NET: Control the Number of Alternate Rows in GridView
The GridView control (as well as the DataGrid) has a way of defining the style of every other row of the grid.
The Web Is a Remote Control, Not a Medium
The scales on the back of my amphibian neck contract whenever I hear otherwise intelligent people refer to the Web as a “medium.”
Atlas and Atlas Control Toolkit Introduction
What is “Atlas”? According to “Atlas” official site, “Atlas” “is a free framework for building a new generation of richer, more interactive, highly personalized standards-based Web applications.
Taking Control Of Consumer-Generated Media
Consumer-generated media (CGM) is still a relative newborn and is far from its full potential. The success of YouTube has grabbed hold of the marketer’s attention, even in its nebulous and unformed state. The future of television is neatly entwined with this sudden phenomenon, as Brightcove CEO Jeremy Allaire will tell you.
User Account Control Getting Refined (and better)
The User Account Control blog explains some of the changes to be expected to UAC in Windows Vista Beta 2.
PR in the Age of Consumer Control
Google. The effusive praise this deceptively low-key search engine elicits is maddening. I used to mock Google. Now I seemingly won’t go to the john without it.
Teenagers Plotting Parental Control Workarounds
Layne Heiny has an excellent article at Windows Vista Buzz detailing how tech-savvy children (who almost always know more about computers than their parents) are already thinking up pretty good ways to beat Windows Vista’s parental controls.