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Yes, I already tried. It was not synchronized. I just need to know is there any way to do that?
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In the Technical Blog FAQ;
Item 10: You can always edit manually
Item 13: Have you waited at least this long
Item 16: Check what is being reported at last polled or last updated.
Have you gone to your "My Articles" and clicked on the "Technical Blogs" tab and check it is listed there.
Remember your blog posts will be treated the same as Articles, these go through moderation process, so could always be stuck in the queue, or are being rejected for some reason.
If you are still having problems, take it to the Site Bugs and Suggestions forums and ask there. The CP Team will help.
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Thank you Dave. I have manually updated my article.
Thanks for the quick reply.
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No seriously! I have been asked to upgrade my entire team to "MVC ready" in 15 days!
So any and all help will be appreciated!
Kind Regards,
- Will
william@enziq.com
www.enziq.com
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Fire them all and start interviews on Monday?
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I have a team of 5 - and I can hardly afford to restart the entire division and submit them to the Onboarding rigmarole!
Kind Regards,
- Will
william@enziq.com
www.enziq.com
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It's about the only way you can be sure to get a team of five fully up to speed with a "new technology" in two weeks. It's way too late to organise a course; there are books and tutorials called "learn MVC in 15 days" (generally with numerous exclamation marks in the title) but my experience with such books in other fields are that you can get the basics, but nowhere near enough to be fully competent. Heck, at the end of one you don't generally even have a clue what you don't know - which is worse than not knowing what you should know (if you see what I mean).
Good luck - but I think it is an unrealistic aim, and you are going to get burnt badly on this one!
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Go Agile, it will help solve any problem you may have, lack of time, insufficient funding, or support from The Client (Please dont forget to "Stand up" in the meetings)
dev
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Boy, have you drunk the Kool-Aid™.
Software Zen: delete this;
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It's Carlsberg this weekend
dev
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Good luck! Pluralsight[^] could get a start on the learning curve.
There are tutorials on asp.net[^].
Wow tough task.
Hope You get up to speed.
David
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Thanks I'll try - 10 days of free training seems good, will try to get some funding for the full package.
Also as someone suggested Agile sounds good, will attempt to convince my team about that too.
Kind Regards,
- Will
william@enziq.com
www.enziq.com
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William Emmanual wrote: Also as someone suggested Agile sounds good
I could be wrong, but I think he was joking.
Again good luck.
David
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William Emmanual wrote: Also as someone suggested Agile
Since you are new here, that was a joke.
Many people here often joke about stuff without using joke icon / smiley, it's their lame effort to attempt a dry british humor, which confuses rest of the 'normal' people.
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William Emmanual wrote: I have been asked to upgrade my entire team to "MVC ready" in 15 days! Go back to the person who made this request and explain why that is not realistic.
Veni, vidi, abiit domum
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Actually, I would go back to the requestor and challenge their assumption. Why 15? Why not 16 or 30 or 1?
Once it's been established that 15 is a completely arbitrary, totally pulled-out-of-someone's-ass number, then start talking about what's realistic.
I don't think OP said in what environment he's currently working. If it's something like Java, then maybe it's not too bad; you know OO concepts, are used to working with an IDE. Moving from Eclipse or whatever to VS won't be totally foreign.
Of course, moving the existing software itself is a big job.
However, if OP is doing something like COBOL or C, then it's a much, much, larger challenge. You have to start with a lower-level, learning the OO concepts and such.
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Ok I'll start MVC means "Move Very Cautiously" that's all I got.
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I don't think this is achievable unless they had had strong training before !
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Do a quick meeting with your team, see if everyone is willing to learn the new concept. Once everyone agrees, I am sure your team could learn the concept of MVC in few days, and after that they should work on a very small project using MVC (it is very important, not just jump in after only reading and watching stuff, you need to try it out).
And after 15 Days, check where everyone stands and then, you all can just jump in with the new Project that your Client/Boss wants with extra days of buffer in the timeline. It is lot of work, but it's possible.
And if you think that after 15 days of trying, the whole thing is not working, just say 'no' with facts and reasons. People respect when you say 'no' with proper justification.
IMHO: for learning, read a book. It's OK if you don't read the whole book and only first few chapters. But before you start watching videos, you should read a book. You should learn the basic concepts thoroughly and only a book can teach you in a detail.
Good luck.
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good advice, thx for posting
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Rutvik Dave wrote: for learning, read a book. It's OK if you don't read the whole book and only first few chapters. But before you start watching videos, you should read a book. You should learn the basic concepts thoroughly and only a book can teach you in a detail.
I find the combination of reading and watching to be better than either alone. I somehow seem to pick up different things from videos than I do from reading (and vice-versa).
Kevin
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I agree, I also combine book, video, online articles, even Q/A on the topic that I want to learn.
Videos are like attending a classroom in the school, but to get a complete picture you still need a text-book.
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Thanks a bunch, have been putting my peeps through the rigor. Reading online as and when we encounter problems. Asp.net makes it as difficult as possible to learn simple things, but yea we have been getting along.
Learning all the way...
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