I found Assassin's Creed I & II for PC in the $5.00 bin at my local store. I go home and install it and with my current PC confguration, I should be able to max out the graphics settings. Graphics rendering stutters everywhere! D: Did some reading and discovered the game would be phoning home to Ubisoft periodically for statistical purposes. After I disabled my network connection, the game runs flawlessly. Mind-Blown! @.@


This video from YouTube makes me laugh. Laughing

 


My wife found this and it is too cute for words. A gopher has made its home near one of the Russian Space Agency's launchpads at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Laughing


Gallery Setup

Published 7/5/2012 by Theo Hua in Computing
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Discovered that setting up Gallery3 on my server which uses Windows 2008, IIS7, and SQL Server; is a non-starter. Cry I have to go back to Gallery2. This is not a bad thing, but still a little disappointing that the Gallery Team has decided for Gallery3 they will no longer support a Windows Server and IIS installation.


I'm finally done with the updates to my blog. Yay! Smile

Updating from BlogEngine 1.3 to 2.6 plus the customization work for the DarkBlog theme took a bit of time.

As an added note, I found that if one chooses to use the DbBlogProvider as the blogProvider and blogSystemProvider fields of the Web.Config; verify that the applicationName in the membership and roleManager fields match the entry in the dbo.aspnet_Applications table in the BlogEngine database. Otherwise, logging into the blog after an upgrade will fail. I found that out the hard way. Cry

But, the blog is finally up and operational. I just hope my posts will be helpful to somebody.

 


I'm Baaaaack!

Published 6/28/2012 by Theo Hua in General

Wow, my last post was well over two years ago. Time to update the engine and climb back up on the horse to try this activity called writing again. Laughing


LOL Cats

Published 5/25/2010 by Theo Hua in Animals & Nature | Humor

funny pictures of cats with captions

funny pictures of cats with captions
see more Lolcats and funny pictures

Are cathartic. :)


Solar Dynamics Observatory

Published 4/22/2010 by Theo Hua in Computing
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I found this article on NASA's website about the first few images of the Sun from the Solar Dynamics Observatory. The article and the photo of the sun are simply amazing. The amount of data being sent down to earth is a mind boggling 1.5 terabytes per day! Surprised 

SDO First Light Composite Image from March 30, 2010


Cellular Coverage

Published 4/9/2010 by Theo Hua in General

Ever wonder how close one is to a cell tower? With http://www.antennasearch.com/ you can find out.

I was having trouble with my provider and I wanted to know how close I was to my provider's towers. Pop in a United States based address and soon enough, the results will map out where the towers are and if there are any permits on file for new tower construction.

 As for my results, I'm in a small deadzone. Cry


More and more software development projects are using the Agile Development Model as opposed to the Waterfall Development Model. Agile does help Designers and Developers deliver software projects on time with higher quality code, but where does that leave the Software Tester? I came across a whitepaper written by James Lyndsay entitled "Testing in an agile environment" from his website that would shed some light on the subject.

Of the many benefits that the Agile Model has, a cornerstone is its insistance on Test Driven Development (TDD). The Designer will have the scenario or user story that the software will address.  From that, test cases are written to validate each step in completing the user story, then code is written to satisfy the test. One of the points stressed throughout the paper was the use of unit tests in the code that both the Developer and Tester would have responsibility to maintain. This would increase the amount of communication and collaboration between Development and Test because Test would not have to wait for Development to finish first before looking at the code; such is the case in the Waterfall Model. By having Developers and Testers working so closely on a project, the Designer has an easier time of ensuring the customer's expectation are still being met, lest the project follows this path.

The Software Development Project

In addition, security design decisions can be implemented from the beginning and verified as the code is being written. As stated before, there is a reduction of documentation, but that fact may be a benefit as counter-intuitive as that may sound. The test documentation instead of living separately from the code, it lives with the code in the form of unit tests. Tests outside of the unit test do need to be documented and recorded, but they should live as close to the code as possible.

There are caveats to this approach, but one that stood out in my mind is the concept of "decision fatigue". That is, since the Tester is involved early on in the development process and the Tester does have the ability to voice and direct change in the product, the Tester may feel overwhelmed at the weight of the consequences of decisions being made. Before, all Testers had to do was follow a specification from the Designer to verify the Developer's work. Now, that same Tester can directly influence the Developer's work or make a change in the Designer's plan. A solution offered by Lyndsay is for the Tester to keep the big picture in mind and what the primary business case the customer wants to solve with the software to direct the decision making.


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