@geek007 i doubt there is any sourcecode for free of any infragistics controls ^^ but maybe i can help you if you tell me a little bit more about what you want to achieve (i'm not familiar with apple products ^^^)
@BenjaminDiele That's what happened in my cities too. I am currently at 3.0 of my city with these insane traffic dividing creations (literally quite crazy, 4 highways to access an area to reduce wait times) and I managed to clutter everything up at 30k inhabitants. Back to the drawing board tonight!
I have two windows form based application ready with me,
now i want to create a watchdog service which can check that my application is running or no, if my application A is not running then it starts the application A.
So the issue is when i try to start an windows form based application from service the application does not start and its only shown under background service in task manager.
@AndroidDev So the problem is in your Process.Start. This just launches a process as the current user and associates its parent with the starter (the service container process). Service container happen to run as SYSTEM, so you just started your GUI for the SYSTEM user.
@AndroidDev A service isnt allowed (by default) to create or run any GUI related stuff, because the user named SYSTEM has no graphical Desktop which he is logged onto. So you need to start the process as the user which is currently logged in and maybe you also need to provide a param which defines the adapter (Desktop)
@SebastianL your suggestion is accepted, but it would be invoking only once & my system will never go off the power, why i want to do it on a service is if my application crashes, i can restart the application automatically
@AndroidDev You have two processes. One is the GUI (which is prone to crashing because you didn't test it properly) and one is the watcher (which is stable and doesn't crash; after all, you tested it properly, and it just watches another process and starts it when it goes down). I run entire servers with user-level watch mechanisms and they never exhibit any problem.
The architecture of Windows NT, a line of operating systems produced and sold by Microsoft, is a layered design that consists of two main components, user mode and kernel mode. It is a preemptive, reentrant operating system, which has been designed to work with uniprocessor and symmetrical multi processor (SMP)-based computers. To process input/output (I/O) requests, they use packet-driven I/O, which utilizes I/O request packets (IRPs) and asynchronous I/O. Starting with Windows 2000, Microsoft began making 64-bit versions of Windows available—before this, these operating systems only existed in...
Hey there. I'm writing a library of data structures. I've sort of written them already, and I'm trying to optimize some of them. Does anyone know a source about low-level optimization in C#?
@Squiggle You don't have to install them. Just buy them, install them remotely on your gaming pc, and stream. No games installed on your work pc!
Btw, for those of you who work remotely / from home. How do you handle unproductive days? At work I feel a lot less guilty if I have an unproductive spell, compared to at home.
Well , I'm Happy i am Self Employed :P Though it's getting extremely hard to do everything myself now and i am messed up atm lol :| I Got a Site, I Buy and Sell Games to Persians ( Who Can't Buy it themself coz they don't have international Credit Card or Bank ) With the money i Earn from selling Games to non-persians ... while maintaining the whole site myself and trying to write Steam API Apps to Make my site better and automate ... while i am studying in my 6th Term of University :|
When I was self-employed and found myself being unproductive I would go to a co-working space. It's easier to be productive when other people around you are doing the same.
failing that, I would take half a day off and go walking in the countryside
Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HM Revenue and Customs or HMRC) is a non-ministerial department of the UK Government responsible for the collection of taxes, the payment of some forms of state support, and the administration of other regulatory regimes including the national minimum wage.
HMRC was formed by the merger of the Inland Revenue and Her Majesty's Customs and Excise which took effect on 18 April 2005. The department's logo is the St Edward's Crown enclosed within a circle.
== Departmental responsibilities ==
The department is responsible for the administration and collection of direct...
@ton.yeung HMRC calculates your tax code, which is basically the first N pounds of your income which is untaxed. That gets increased or decreased depending on what you're entitled to. Your employer is given your tax code by HMRC and they use that to deduce how much tax they should withhold from your pay. The right amount is paid by way of the bottom (tax-free) bracket being moved per employee
@ton.yeung I think "it's complicated". The tax break system was meant to be fixed by a project called "Universal Credit", but it's a clusterfuck of technical incompetency right now
Universal Credit is a welfare benefit launched in the United Kingdom in 2013 to replace six means-tested benefits and tax credits: Jobseeker’s Allowance, Housing Benefit, Working Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, Employment and Support Allowance and Income Support.
A pilot in four local authorities was scheduled to precede the national launch of the scheme in October 2013 for new claimants (excluding more complex cases such as families with children), with a gradual transition to be complete by 2017. However, only one of the original pilots went ahead at the expected date, in Ashton-under-Lyne, due...
@ton.yeung I thought usually when Americans refer to 'the [x] code' for a particular domain, what that means is the set of regulations that apply to that domain e.g. the tax code or the building code. Hence your comment that it's usually complicated
maybe if I just stay home and wrap myself in a blanket burrito people won't continue to tell me things that make me want to wrap myself in a blanket burrito