Is there such a thing as too many blogs? We've certainly pushed the limit in the past couple of days, and a few folks have pointed out that some of the entries are dropping off the view, and may be getting missed. Here's a list of all the blogs in the past 2 days, from the BCL team (thanks to Julia Lerman for doing the same already): 35 entries in total.
- Intra-Whidbey (V2.0) Obsoletions: a MUST have list for people using Beta2
- Why aren't there parsers for CodeDom?
- Language features which can’t be expressed using CodeDOM in Whidbey
- SafeHandle: A Reliability Case Study
- New Performance Counter Features
- Cross Version Serialization Broken between V1.1 and V2.0
- Knowing what's out there: creating a reference list of Managed .NET Apps
- A trick to accessing the 64 bit registry from a 32 bit app (and vice-versa)
- How to get .NET Framework Design Guidelines Updates
- Why System.Collections.ObjectModel namesapce?
- PowerCollections MSDN TV Broadcast
- Play the CLR acronym game!
- How to set MACL from one directory to another?
- Avoiding Boxing in Classes Implementing Generic Interfaces through Reflection
- How Did System.Decimal Change from V1.0 to V1.1?
- CodeDom now supports a way to generate code for CodeTypeMember
- .NET Regular Expressions: Regex and Balanced Matching
- Potential additions to the Math class
- .NET Regular Expressions: how to use RegexOptions.IgnorePatternWhitspace
- DirectoryInfo.Name lacks security checks
- What are the New DateTime Features in Whidbey
- IO Exceptions will now reveal FullPath (if you have PathDiscovery access)
- A Tracing Primer - Part I
- Writing a Useful Windows Service in .NET in Five Minutes
- Testing Managed ACL for IO
- Synchronization in Generic Collections
- Fixing bugs with compatibility in mind - an IO experience
- Best V2.0 feature in the .NET Framework: A BCL Poll
- Come and Meet the CLR team!
- The .NET Vision (aka: the big picture): what are we working towards?
- An intro to CodeDom
- SafeHandles: the best V2.0 feature of the .NET Framework
- The Base Class Library Program Manager (PM): a job description
- PerformanceCounters: reading the disk counters
- The SLAR on System.Convert
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东西很多呀。