I'm really not sure what your problem is... I've been working with the ASP:Login control for going on a year now, without any problems resembling what you're describing. I can enter my user/pass and hit the enter key, and it logs me in no problem what-so-ever. I think your code must be b0rked...
rswafford
@rswafford
Best posts made by rswafford
Latest posts made by rswafford
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RE: ASP:Login WTF
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RE: WebForms+Ajax-like framework for .net?
My company purchased the ASP.NET control suite from telerik (http://www.telerik.com/) back in March, and the apps we're using it in are drastically improved for it. They just released a new control this week called the rad AjaxManager. Essentially, you drop it on the page, tell it which controls initiate server requests, and which controls each should update, and it automagically ajaxifies the page. It is pretty slick -- go take a look and download the trial versions. Their support is top notch, even though they are based half a world away from us (we're in the US, they're in Bulgaria).
They've also got a bunch of other Ajaxy controls in the suite, all very nicely polished and easy to work with. Hope that helps... -
RE: Curious -- who blocks Ads, and Why?
I use Firefox, which by default blocks popups -- in my opinion one of the most annoying types of ads. In general, I don't block advertisment images as long as they're not huge. If a site I'm reading plants a giant advertisement after the first 3 lines of the article, I'm gonna block that image with adblock. The same goes for Flash and movie based ads -- I HATE those, and will do everything I can to block them. Not only are they incredibly distracting, but they just make that page a hell of a lot larger to download. The flash ads that actually give you the option of whether to play them or not aren't as bad, since they're not moving as soon as they load.
The last type that I absolutely cannot stand is the full page animated overlays -- you know, the ones where the ad floats out from the side of the page and slides back and forth a few times, preventing you from actually clicking anywhere on the page, and when its done, you have to find the tiny 'close' button before you can do anything useful.
So to answer your question Alex, yes I do block ads, but only the ones that are truly invasive. The ads on TDWTF (so far) have escaped my adblocker, unless you've got some popups hidden on here :p -
RE: The latest in anti-piracy...
@dhromed said:
@Juifeng said:
<rant>And the way partitions are named in windows is stupid. /media/cdrom or /mnt/whatever or /home/user seems better to me. I mean "D:".. whats "D"?</rant>
They go all they way up to Z!
... and not beyond...
Bingo...and therein lies one problem that windows is going to HAVE to address in the next version. Not vista, but whatever vista+1 is... I can understand why they went that route to begin with, but it really is going to bite them in the ass in the near future.... you'll have devs with 4 (or more) physical disk drives, 2 physical CD drives, a zip drive, tape drive, 4 different 'media' drives (usb keys, SD cards, CF cards etc), 2-4 virtual CD drives, and then a slew of network shares mapped for work, and all of a sudden you're out of letters. I'm curious -- and very very scared -- to see what hacks M$ comes up with to get around this problem.
And yes, I know you can mount a drive as a folder using NTFS...but that's a pretty bad hack. I want extensibility, flexibility, and the ability to see all of my hard drives listed in one place, whether its 2 or 200. I don't wanna have to remember that my media drives are mounted under C:\Media and work drives are under D:\Work. </rant>
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RE: The latest in anti-piracy...
@HitScan said:
@AI0867 said:
@LuciferSam said:
But doesn't everyone have a D:\ drive?
on all my windows boxes, D:\ is a hard drive partition, my non-virtual CD/DVD drives are usually around G:\ or somethingFun fact: If your CD drive is past H: there's whole list of games that won't work for you because of the copy protection they use.
I have a theory on why it's H, if you start counting from A and see when you hit H you'll probably come to the same conclusion. ;)
Interesting...my DVD drive has always been R:\ (for read) and my CD-RW has always been W:\ (for write) for at LEAST the past 8-10 years....as long as I can remember anyway. And I have yet to encounter a single game, program, movie, whatever that won't play because of that naming scheme. Have you a list of these games that would supposedly give me problems?
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RE: Open Source == Quality
Please enlighten us as to what exactly is 'wrong' with the code... I'm sure most of us don't do serverlets, and a good chunk of us don't work with Java either. Far as I can tell, thats fairly easy to follow, decent code.
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RE: Extra special check
Umm...yeah... that hurts to look at...
Much prettier if you'd just do if(!rs.IsEOF()), but what's the fun in that? -
RE: Make Your Own Software!!
This is ridiculous...though I would love to see what a 'recipe' looks like, and try to make something with this package...not that I expect it to work though.
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RE: Forbes Slideshow
Did you not happen to notice the button marked SLOWER at the top? So their web dev decided 6 seconds was a good default... you can quite easily change it to whatever delay you'd like. Nothing to see here...
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RE: Intersystems Caché -- Gateway to hell
I just got a link to this book from O'Reilly, and I can't believe someone actually would do this... its about tying a C# frontend onto a Cache database.
WTF??