Developer Interface 3.0 getting excellent reviews
Posted by Karen AleschWe are one week away from the general availability of our enhanced Developer Interface 3.0. Launch date is set for February 15th. We have put this new release in the hands of a number of early release customers and we have already gotten great feedback on the enhancements this new release offers!
Those of you who have had issues with proxy servers at work, will find this new release has a robust support for proxy servers. You will also want to give the new SEARCH capability a try. It allows you to easily find code snippets from our challenges that provide you with quick and easy reference for your every day job needs.
Of course the biggest new feature that we are so excited about is our integration with Visual Studio. The Developer Interface now is an add-in for VS2003 or VS2005. You have access to all of the key functionality of our learning environment right inside of Visual Studio — no more flipping back and forth between applications.
We look forward to hearing from more of you once our new DI3.0 is released. Again, that date is February 15th! Let us know what you think.













July 21st, 2010 at 5:29 pm
Use fast and free Anonymous proxy service with high Security.
August 26th, 2010 at 6:49 am
Security + is a good stepping stone certification - covers a lot of basic ideas that might be beneficial if you lack any security experience. If you’ve passed the CCNA and are thinking to get into the security field, CCSP is definitely the way to go providing you want a vendor specific certification. Otherwise CISSP or even CEH (which honestly, I don’t know how in-demand this certification is).
August 27th, 2010 at 4:03 pm
Circumventing Internet access control systems with web proxies to access unauthorized web sites is a violation of school computer usage policy. You will get suspended and/or banned from using school computers when you get caught. Use school computers for school work, and the personal web surfing can wait until you get home. Do you really want your teachers and school administrators knowing what websites you are visiting anyways?