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- Lattice.SPGen - Stored Procedures Generator (zip)
- Lattice.SPGen is a template-based stored procedure and code generator that supports Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, IBM DB2 UDB, PostgreSQL and MySQL. It processes any tables and views in the database that you select and generate stored procedures scripts of insert, update, delete, select single or multiple records as well as...
- Tags: Business Entity, MySQL, IBM DB2 Universal Database, PostgreSQL, IBM DB2, Microsoft Visual Basic.Net, Lattice.SPGen, C#, .Net, Databases, Programming Languages, Microsoft Development Tools, Enterprise Software, Software Development, Software/Web Development, Software, Data Management, Development Tools
- Software downloads 2006-10-16
Additional Resources
- Looking at single atoms of hydrogen
- As you probably know, graphene is a one-atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms packed in a dense two-dimensional honeycomb lattice. And it recently became very popular recently as a basis for ultra-fast transistors. Now, according to Science News, U.S. researchers are using graphene to image individual hydrogen atoms via a standard...
- Tags: Atom, Researcher, Hydrogen, Carbon, Here, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2008-07-19
- IMHO, PhlatLight LEDs from Luminus are pretty phat
- LED screens in notebooks are becoming fairly common, if not standard, not just because of the energy issues but because people are craving smaller, lighter laptops. But what about an LED in your HDTV? Enter Luminus Devices of Billerica, Mass., which has developed an LED chip...
- Tags: Home Theater, DLP, Light-emitting Diode, Luminus Technology, Engineering, Home Entertainment, Personal Technology, Heather Clancy
- Blog posts 2008-07-08
- Microwaves from silicon chips?
- X-rays are widely used for medical imaging and security, but they still are dangerous. Would it be possible to replace X-rays by an imaging technology based on microwave radiation? Until now, it was not feasible because portable devices were not powerful enough. Now, two U.S. scientists have found how to...
- Tags: Microwave, Signal, Silicon Chip, Capacitor, Chip, Lattice, X-rays, Ehsan Afshari, Semiconductors, Network Technology, Document Management, Telecom & Utilities, Hardware, Networking, Enterprise Software, Software, Finance, Managerial Accounting, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2008-05-30
- Sudoku Mania Pro (prc)
- Join to billions fans of Sudoku! Solve the mystery of the number grid with reasoning and patience no math required. The Sudoku board is a lattice consists of nine columns and nine rows and is divided into nine 3x3 boxes. Some squares have initial numbers (from 1 to 9) in...
- Tags: Row, Square, PDArt, Sudoku Board, Corporate Governance, Business Operations, Corporate Law
- Software downloads 2008-03-21
- Protein+nanotech+in+next+gen+storage
- Protein+nanotech+in+next+gen+storageviruses?Perhaps too far in advance for any testing, but I wonder if this places a new spin on the term "computer virus". Imagine somehow "infecting" a hard drive with a pathogen which feeds on proteins. Your machine would no longer need to be turned on to be destroyed. Plus, the...
- Tags: Advertising & Promotion, SECURITY, protein, storage, media, attack, hard drive
- Discussion threads 2008-02-14
- Snowflakes or 3-D snowfakes?
- Snowflakes have been puzzling mathematicians for about four centuries. Still, scientists have never been able to fully explain snowflake shapes. For example, is this true that their six-pointed structure reflect an underlying crystal structure? Now, two U.S. mathematicians have developed software that simulates 3-D snowflakes. And they discovered that even...
- Tags: 3D, Researcher, Image, Computer, Molecule, Productivity, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2008-01-21
- Alliances represent new Microsoft direction
- Alliances represent new Microsoft directionGreat marketingThis way, Microsoft gets to be the "face" that the end-users see.It's not fundamentally different from the arrangement that they made with Lattice for C compilers back in the day: when MS came out with their own, nobody knew or cared who Lattice had been.M$...
- Tags: Strategy, alliance, Microsoft Corp.
- Discussion threads 2008-01-07
- Foams with good memory for space applications
- The U.S. National Science Foundation NSF has recently reported that two research teams have developed a new porous foam of an alloy that changes shape when exposed to a magnetic field. The NSF states that this new material is able to remember its original shape after it's been deformed by...
- Tags: National Science Foundation, Foam, Memory, Material, Team Management, Nanotechnology, Management, Emerging Technologies, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2008-01-01
- Graphene-based transistors on the way?
- The idea of replacing silicon with carbon to make computer chips is not new. However, using graphene -- a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb lattice -- wasn't feasible because it is not possible today to make wafers as big as ones made from silicon. But two...
- Tags: Technique, Researcher, Stamp, Transistor, Semiconductors, Productivity, Hardware, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-12-19
- Building 3-D particles with light
- Engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT have used ultraviolet light to create mass-producing 3-D microparticles that could be used for medical diagnostics and tissue engineering. 'For example, they could be designed to act as probes to detect certain molecules, such as DNA, or to release drugs or nutrients.'...
- Tags: 3D, Massachusetts Institute Of Technology, Particle, Biotechnology, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-12-04
- Who is afraid of the GGG?
- Who is afraid of the GGG?Like trying to make a fish ride a bicycleThe semantic web is basically predicate logic just like its close cousin the RDBMS.Trying to do predicate logic with XML is like trying to make a fish ride a bicycle.Not sure about this graph businessI simply don't...
- Tags: Ity, GGG, Semantic Web
- Discussion threads 2007-11-28
- New nanotechnology fabrication techniques
- A recent American Chemical Society's Weekly PressPac briefly describes an important advance toward industrial-scale production of nanodevices (scroll down to item #4). With this new technique, 'zinc oxide nanowires are grown in the exact positions where nanodevices later will be fabricated, in a way that involves a minimum number of...
- Tags: Technique, Method, American Chemical Society, Nanotechnology, NIST, NW, Productivity, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-11-13
- A one-atom thick billiard table
- A team of physicists at the University of California at Riverside UCR have found that graphene, which was isolated experimentally only less than three years ago, and which is a one-atom thick sheet of carbon atoms arranged in hexagonal rings, can act as an atomic-scale billiard table. They found that...
- Tags: Electron, Quantum, Transistor, Electronics, Carbon Atom, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-09-15
- Polymer opal films are not for rings
- British and German researchers have developed a new type of flexible plastic film. These 'polymer opal films' can change colors under certain conditions. For example, they could easily help you to see if some kind of perishable food items are not good anymore because the packaging would change color. They...
- Tags: Science &, Nature, Nanotechnology, Engineering &, Innovation
- Blog posts 2007-07-28
- Microsoft headed for a services show-down with its hosting partners
- Microsoft headed for a services show-down with its hosting partnersGlad we didn'tWhen SharePoint first came on the scene one of my clients was very interested in providing hosting services for it. At the time I suggested that one of two things would happen. A.) Not enough people would...
- Tags: Business structures, Microsoft Corp., partnership
- Discussion threads 2007-06-18
- Diamond-based quantum computing
- Quantum computing is usually associated with extremely low temperatures. Now, physicists at Harvard University have shown that diamonds can be used to create stable quantum computing building blocks at room temperature. A nitrogen vacancy in diamond could lead to quantum registers able to store or retrieve data. One of the...
- Tags: Science &, Nature, Engineering &, Innovation, Computers &, Internet
- Blog posts 2007-06-01
- Memory storage for light-based computers
- In a brief article, Japanese scientists cage light, The Register reports that scientists working for NTT have used photonic crystals to trap light by over one nanosecond. In fact, light was trapped inside a wavelength-sized micro-cavity, delaying its transmission. So the apparent speed of light was reduced by a factor...
- Tags: Semiconductors, storage, computer, NTT Corp., photonic crystal
- Blog posts 2006-12-26
- Lattice.DataMapper (zip)
- Lattice.DataMapper provides a .NET 1.1 and .NET 2.0 object-persistence library for relational databases. It supports both the generic and nullable value type introduced in .NET 2.0. Data access is externalized in XML and can include both SQL queries and stored procedure calls. In addition, the product will group queries together...
- Tags: Data Access, Lattice.DataMapper, .Net, Application Servers, Middleware, Databases, Software Development, Software/Web Development, Enterprise Software, Software, Data Management
- Software downloads 2006-11-08
- From Microsoft to Opensoft? Novell just another hole in the garden wall
- From Microsoft to Opensoft? Novell just another hole in the garden wallSix yearsYou're missing the key point of the deal: it expires in six years. After that, all bets are off and Microsoft is free to sue Novell and its customers into oblivion.Which goes directly to the "which road"...
- Tags: wall, open source, Microsoft Corp., Novell Inc.
- Discussion threads 2006-11-03
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