Articles Authored
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Die VSS Die!
Last updated: Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2004 - September/October
Jonathan Goodyear (the Angry Coder) September/October 2004
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dotNetTemplar vs. angryCoder: To Go Live, or Not to Go Live
Last updated: Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2005 - July/August
Angry Coder - Jonathan Goodyear and J. Ambrose Little - July/August 2005
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Life Is A Loop
Last updated: Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2004 - July/August
Jonathan Goodyear (the Angry Coder) July/August 2004
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Showing Some MVP Love
Last updated: Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2004 - May/June
Jonathan Goodyear (the Angry Coder) discusses MVPs and ASP.NET.
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Sorting Objectively
Last updated: Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2005 - January/February
Jonathan Goodyear (the Angry Coder) January/Febuary 2005
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The Mind of an Angry Coder: Dances with Vacuums
Last updated: Thursday, February 21, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2004 - March/April
As the pace of software development continues to accelerate, the way in which we approach it must change to keep up as well. What made sense before isn't as practical now.
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The Mind of an Angry Coder: I Take Exception to That
Last updated: Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2003 - November/December
Many products are taking advantage of the enhanced exception management features that the .NET Framework provides, yet very few are going the extra mile to provide instant solutions.
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The Mind of an Angry Coder: Kicked to the Curb
Last updated: Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2003 - September/October
Microsoft promised to support VB6 long after the release of .NET, but their actions are telling a different story.
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The Mind of an Angry Coder: Waiting to Inhale
Last updated: Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2004 - January/February
The recent Professional Developer Conference (PDC) fostered great excitement about the power of the .NET Framework v2.0. Unfortunately, it is going to be well into next year before most developers even get a whiff of all things Whidbey; and that's only in beta form. Some important .NET language and framework enhancements are in a big holding pattern, though, and I don't think that's right.