Looking Back – A Review of My Most Popular Blogs
I have been Blogging for over two and a half years. I have almost 400 entries on my Blog. So I got to looking at my stats from some of my earliest posts and thought I would build a list of 10 of my most popular early post.
I found this exercise very interesting and made me think about where I have been and where I want to go. Also, reviewing my older posts sort of reveals how my writing has matured too! I think this will be useful because there are so many new readers now that may not know what I wrote about 24 months ago.
Changing the Password Format – My third post ever, amazing how many eyeballs it has had.
Caching in ASP.NET varyby Language – Not sure if it is the power of mentioning Hanselman in Blog or not, but this reference Blog to an insightful Blog by Scott has a lot of traffic. Basically watch how you set OutPut Cache on an international site.
MultiView where have you been? – Ah my early praise of this fantastic control in the ASP.NET 2.0 library.
Data Binding and the Crystal Report Viewer – Funny, this week I am struggling with the ReportViewer Control for SSRS.
Nesting Master Pages, Do It At Your Risk – So this was a problem in Visual Studio 2005, not in 2008.
Using ASP.NET 2.0 with IIS – I do not get this error anymore and I have no clue how I solved it, but most likely the comments are the clue we need.
Custom SiteMap Provider – At one time I was really fascinated with SiteMaps and SiteMapProviders. I have sort of moved on because I really found them constraining.
URLMapping or URL Rewriting – I think this was one of my first entries on URLRewriting. I am doing some more research into Rewriting scenarios now, so I hope to post more updated information soon.
301 Redirect ASP.NET – 301 Redirects, a topic any web architect should really learn. This was one of my early entries. I know I have a few more on the topic.
Infragisitcs UltraWebTab and FreeTextBox – This was a wasted support call to Infragitstics I had to pay for. I do not know if Infragistics has fixed their support issues or not, from what my friends say the answer is no.