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eugeny_work
The best way to learn how to work with editors is to work with editors is to follow their guidelines.
These instructions are never considered worth mentioning in PR and Marketing tutorials. (To my mind, this is because their authors are too much absorbed in selfpromotion to care of such stuff).
But don't panic, the editors are always keen to help you! They are the first to suffer from your ignorance, you know.

These guidelines I found quite helpful:

  1. Pointers for PR Professionals by Intelligent Enterprise Magazine

  2. Guide to Linux Journal for PR Professionals

  3. Working with the Editors by BZ Media

  4. Writers' Guidelines by Windows IT Pro Magazine

  5. Contributing to Optimize(FAQs)

  6. Technical guidelines from Level Extreme .NET Magazine

 
 
eugeny_work
22 June 2007 @ 06:37 pm
I've recently come across a very favorable blogpost on ReSharper.

Speaking of VisualStudio, SuperJason encouraged me to encourage our boss to spring for a license of ReSharper. I’ve rarely been so pleased with a purchase made on my behalf with someone else’s money. ReSharper helps you refactor whole solutions, automagically renaming classes, namespaces and variables. It suggests corrections for your code, and helps you identify redundancy. And it cleans up your “using” statements like magic. It’s a fantastic add-on to VS2005, and well worth spending your employer’s money on.


Of course (not least because it's a part of my job :)), I got interested in mentioned SuperJason and followed the link for his blog. I naturally expected to meet a ReSharper evangelist I have somehow never come across. It was slightly surprising to find out that the only blogpost he ever had on Resharper was JetBrains Resharper is a fat slow pig.
These guys made a nice progress, didn't they? :)
P.S. Congratulations on ReSharper 3.0 release, guys!
 
 
 
 

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