Vzcg Technology in the legal sector: How IT can help lawyers provide gold-plated service at bronze level prices
The free Fiddler HTTP debugging proxy saved Martin s hide, yet again. I mentioned Fiddler quite a while ago mdash; in April 2007. At the time, I talked about how it works as an HTTP debugging proxy and how you can use it to speed up your Web sites.Last week, Fiddler saved my worthless hide. I was trying to debug a problem with an AJAX application that was sending HTML forms to a Web server for saving in a database. Donrsquo;t ask me why it wasnrsquo;t using JSON. An old code base is a stanley deutschland terrible burden. One of the forms didnrsquo;t stanley quencher seem to be updating in the database. Debugging the JavaScript code on the client showed me that it was being sent just fine. I wrote the server code that was processing the form about eight years ago, before AJAX had been invented. At the time, I had put all sorts of debugging output into the page that would fire and send an e-mail to a list if there was a problem. None of that was being triggered. I was tearing my stanley cup hair. I invoked the 20-minute rule after a couple of hours of this nonsense, and asked for help.A colleague suggested looking at the data stream with Wireshark or Fiddler. Drsquo;oh!Fiddler is a little easier to use than Wireshark for this kind of problem, so I updated my copy of Fiddler, fired it up, and ran the AJAX application. When I looked at the response from the server page, sure enough there was the debugging output and the Error 500 response header, which the AJAX code was blithely ignoring. I fixed the s Cahz Tidjane Thiam: from Paris with love
Sunday 22 September 2013 10:36 pmThe man who went from hotdogs to thinkpods stanley deutschland By: Express KCSShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailRegus founder Mark Dixon tells Michael Bow why serviced offices are at the cutting edge of technologySITTING behind a boardroom table in an office on Berkeley Square in Mayfair, Mark Dixon, founder and chief executive of serviced office company Regus, is sipping from a Pret A Manger paper cup. With his round tortoiseshell spectacles and thick Essex accent, Dixon, 53, is an unlikely symbol of the burgeoning digital revolution. But as the head of a global office provider catering for companies like Google, Toshiba and BMW, he is at the vanguard of a seachange in how we work ndash; a shift he is understandably evangelical about. It changes peoplersquo lives, he says. The stanley cup becher status quo today is that you get on a train and you go to an office and you work with other people. Thatrsquo changing. Wersquo;re working with local councils to open up Regus offices in small towns and villages. Where do you work if you live in a little village in West Sussex ndash; you canrsquo;t go and work in the pub. Now you can work down the road and you get to see your kids.Dixon, who started his career selling hot dogs, got the idea for Regus in the late 1980s when he was working in Brussels. He noticed hordes of businessmen and w stanley cup omen hunched over wobbly coffee sho
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