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9:50 AM
@Alex yea i saw it and didn't link it for that limitation.. hopefully we'll have c# supported in "4-6 weeks" xD
 
Good morning
 
 
2 hours later…
11:44 AM
'morning! WOW, you're in here early.
 
Hi Lynn
Yeah, my sleep is totally off
But this way, I'm done at 3 :)
 
You're allowed to head home that early?
(read: flex hours?)
 
My mngrs are nice people. If you come in at 6, you can leave at 3
 
Nice!
 
One guy would come in at 5:30 and leave at 2:30!
 
12:03 PM
Wow... still time to pick the kids up from school at that point
 
Well, he retired a few years back so he was past the kids phase :)
 
I would do super flex hours, but kiddo has to be at school at 7:45 so I drop him off them come in. I guess I could come in early, drop him off at school at 8 for my "lunch hour" then come back.
Seeing as I live 5 minutes from work.
 
Dang. Not much of any commute
 
Nope. I've put 2,000 miles on my car in nearly 6 months
 
12:22 PM
Wow
 
 
2 hours later…
2:27 PM
Has anyone used SkillSoft? Had a subscription years ago. Now my job can buy subcriptions for those who ask.
 
2:38 PM
What's that?
Guessing a training series subscription type of thing...
 
Yup, training site with tons of latest IT books
 
 
2 hours later…
4:43 PM
posted on August 22, 2019 by Glenn Condron [MSFT]

This post is a collection of content from David Boike from the Particular.net blog calling out some common problems and solutions for building message based distributed systems. They are relevant to anyone building apps using messaging, and anyone building a Microservice based solution should definitely be interested in the first post about slimming down events. The post Messaging Practices ap

 
5:26 PM
100% agree with that author, though I think he trivializes the "did all X events occur yet" problem
 
5:41 PM
If you're rolling your own distributed messaging, that article can help. Azure has its own messaging system which is robust.
 
posted on August 22, 2019 by Mika Dumont

The .NET team is constantly thinking of new ways to make developers more productive. We’ve been working hard over the past year to take the feedback you’ve sent us and turn it into tools that you want! In this post I’ll cover some of the latest productivity features available in Visual Studio 2019 Preview. The post Visual Studio Tips and Tricks: Increasing your Productivity for .NE

 
that's pretty funny
 
Hah! There was a Dreamweaver plugin that generated fake Shakespeare or corporate blabber
 

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