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codeguru

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  • P peterchen

    ...it was the one great site. Those who remember should not forget.


    Flirt harder, I'm a Coder
    mlog || Agile Programming | doxygen

    K Offline
    K Offline
    KaRl
    wrote on last edited by
    #26

    Amen! Yep, there was a time when CP didn't exist...


    And I'm talking to myself at night because I can't forget Back and forth through my mind Behind a cigarette

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    • J Jeremy Falcon

      Ok, it's been a while since I've done the whole poem thing, so here's one dedicated to CP and Chris M. (I hope this is taken in good humor). :) Now I lay me down to sleep, I hope like hell my servers keep. If they should fail before I wake, I pray to Bob my site won't flake. Jeremy Falcon

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      Chris Maunder
      wrote on last edited by
      #27

      5! cheers, Chris Maunder

      J 1 Reply Last reply
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      • C Chris Maunder

        OK boys and girls, gather round... A long, long time ago, back when the world was newer and the grass was greener and internet stocks were on speed, a young man named Zafir Anjum started a website to host chapters of a book he was writing. The site soon became known as the MFC Programmer's Sourcebook and it was Good. Soon, a few caring, sharing, and, in my case, easily distractable people started sending Zafir whitepapers to complement the chapters he had posted, and the site grew. As it grew, more people used his site, and more people contributed. One day it all grew so big that Zafir decided to change the name to CodeGuru and bring a few of us on board properly in order to spread the load and make the site Better. Life was good. The birds chirped each morning, developers read the site, participated in the forums, and sent angry email about broken links. I was running the day-to-day site business while Zafir fed the gnomes running the backend system. And the site grew. Soon Tom Archer came on board to help take some more of the load. There were also about 20 volunteers in varying degrees of busyness handling article submissions. Developers developed, authors submitted, advertisers advertised and links were broken. Then in July 1999 the EarthWeb machinery appeared and swallowed the site. Zafir went back home to India for some rest while the rest of us milled around, gnashing our teeth and wringing our hands now that we had been locked out of the site and could no longer post submissions or fix broken links. There was much wailing. After 3 months David Cunningham and I decided that there had been too much wailing and too much gnashing and so hunkered down and, pebble by pebble, started building a new site. It would be what we always dreamed could be done. It would be fun. It would be comprehensive. It would be running on flaky Windows servers instead of robust Linux servers. And it would be Orange. That day, November 15, 1999, CodeTools was born. Then we discovered CodeTools was trademarked so 2 weeks later CodeProject was born. Or reborn. Or renamed. Or whatever. cheers, Chris Maunder

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        Joshua Quick
        wrote on last edited by
        #28

        Thanks for taking the time to tell us this Chris. I'd also like to thank you (Chris Maunder), David Cunningham, and everyone else who has contributed to CodeProject in making it the site that it is today. Fantastic job! To everyone else, I think the best way to show your appreciation and support for CodeProject is to continue to submit quality articles and your knowledge in the message boards. Let's help make this site even better.

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        • J Joshua Quick

          I always thought CodeProject was fairly young. I assumed it started when Chris Maunder, who was a moderator at CodeGuru I believe, left that site which I think was about 1999. Am I wrong? How old is CodeProject anyways?

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          peterchen
          wrote on last edited by
          #29

          yep, it is... (see Chris' post below) Yet, it's one of the things where I have the feeling that time flows... differently.


          Flirt harder, I'm a Coder
          mlog || Agile Programming | doxygen

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          • J Jeremy Falcon

            Ok, it's been a while since I've done the whole poem thing, so here's one dedicated to CP and Chris M. (I hope this is taken in good humor). :) Now I lay me down to sleep, I hope like hell my servers keep. If they should fail before I wake, I pray to Bob my site won't flake. Jeremy Falcon

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            M Offline
            Mazdak
            wrote on last edited by
            #30

            I didn't know you could say poem. :-D Mazy "A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you don't need it." - Bob Hope

            J 1 Reply Last reply
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            • C Chris Maunder

              5! cheers, Chris Maunder

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              J Offline
              Jeremy Falcon
              wrote on last edited by
              #31

              :-D Jeremy Falcon

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              • M Mazdak

                I didn't know you could say poem. :-D Mazy "A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you don't need it." - Bob Hope

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                Jeremy Falcon
                wrote on last edited by
                #32

                I have my moments of weakness. :-O Jeremy Falcon

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                • P peterchen

                  I think it would mainly drain the - no insult intended - "lower end". To me it seems many of the top article providers have a well paying day time job, and use code project to exercise their idea of "free software".


                  Flirt harder, I'm a Coder
                  mlog || Agile Programming | doxygen

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                  Jeremy Falcon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #33

                  peterchen wrote: To me it seems many of the top article providers have a well paying day time job I completely agree. For me, it's more along the lines of giving back to the communtiy I learned from rather than making $5. Jeremy Falcon

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                  • J Jeremy Falcon

                    Ok, it's been a while since I've done the whole poem thing, so here's one dedicated to CP and Chris M. (I hope this is taken in good humor). :) Now I lay me down to sleep, I hope like hell my servers keep. If they should fail before I wake, I pray to Bob my site won't flake. Jeremy Falcon

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                    J Offline
                    Jorgen Sigvardsson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #34

                    Were you by any chance listening to Metallica - Sandman, or watching Nightmare on Elmstreet, when you wrote this? :rolleyes: :-D -- So let's just walk from place to place, as long as we don't talk face to face.

                    J 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                      Were you by any chance listening to Metallica - Sandman, or watching Nightmare on Elmstreet, when you wrote this? :rolleyes: :-D -- So let's just walk from place to place, as long as we don't talk face to face.

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                      Jeremy Falcon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #35

                      Nope it was some CPians talking about it being a nice bedtime story that spawned that one. However, I think I'll go listen to Metallica now. :) Jeremy Falcon

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                      • P peterchen

                        I think it would mainly drain the - no insult intended - "lower end". To me it seems many of the top article providers have a well paying day time job, and use code project to exercise their idea of "free software".


                        Flirt harder, I'm a Coder
                        mlog || Agile Programming | doxygen

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        Stephane Rodriguez
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #36

                        peterchen wrote: I think it would mainly drain the - no insult intended - "lower end". I would have agreed until last year. Since then, most articles that gets in are rubbish.


                        RSS feed

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • J Jeremy Falcon

                          Ok, it's been a while since I've done the whole poem thing, so here's one dedicated to CP and Chris M. (I hope this is taken in good humor). :) Now I lay me down to sleep, I hope like hell my servers keep. If they should fail before I wake, I pray to Bob my site won't flake. Jeremy Falcon

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                          S Offline
                          scadaguy
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #37

                          I'm on call this weekend. I hope you don't mind me saying this prayer. I will, of course, give credit where it is deserved if God should answer.

                          J 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • S scadaguy

                            I'm on call this weekend. I hope you don't mind me saying this prayer. I will, of course, give credit where it is deserved if God should answer.

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            Jeremy Falcon
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #38

                            Brian Gideon wrote: I hope you don't mind me saying this prayer. Feel free, it's open source. :) Jeremy Falcon

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                            • P Paul Charles

                              Looks like Earthweb have finally got round to updating www.codeguru.com, still going have to go someway to beat codeproject. Especially in regards to how often articles appear and the quality of their formatting

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                              H Offline
                              Heath Stewart
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #39

                              Definitely seems a little more navigatable and easier to read.

                              Microsoft MVP, Visual C# My Articles

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • C Chris Maunder

                                OK boys and girls, gather round... A long, long time ago, back when the world was newer and the grass was greener and internet stocks were on speed, a young man named Zafir Anjum started a website to host chapters of a book he was writing. The site soon became known as the MFC Programmer's Sourcebook and it was Good. Soon, a few caring, sharing, and, in my case, easily distractable people started sending Zafir whitepapers to complement the chapters he had posted, and the site grew. As it grew, more people used his site, and more people contributed. One day it all grew so big that Zafir decided to change the name to CodeGuru and bring a few of us on board properly in order to spread the load and make the site Better. Life was good. The birds chirped each morning, developers read the site, participated in the forums, and sent angry email about broken links. I was running the day-to-day site business while Zafir fed the gnomes running the backend system. And the site grew. Soon Tom Archer came on board to help take some more of the load. There were also about 20 volunteers in varying degrees of busyness handling article submissions. Developers developed, authors submitted, advertisers advertised and links were broken. Then in July 1999 the EarthWeb machinery appeared and swallowed the site. Zafir went back home to India for some rest while the rest of us milled around, gnashing our teeth and wringing our hands now that we had been locked out of the site and could no longer post submissions or fix broken links. There was much wailing. After 3 months David Cunningham and I decided that there had been too much wailing and too much gnashing and so hunkered down and, pebble by pebble, started building a new site. It would be what we always dreamed could be done. It would be fun. It would be comprehensive. It would be running on flaky Windows servers instead of robust Linux servers. And it would be Orange. That day, November 15, 1999, CodeTools was born. Then we discovered CodeTools was trademarked so 2 weeks later CodeProject was born. Or reborn. Or renamed. Or whatever. cheers, Chris Maunder

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                                R Offline
                                Roger Wright
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #40

                                Thanks, Chris!:-D It's nice to know The Legend at last. Heard in Bullhead City - "You haven't lost your girl -
                                you've just lost your turn..." [sigh] So true...

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • C Chris Maunder

                                  OK boys and girls, gather round... A long, long time ago, back when the world was newer and the grass was greener and internet stocks were on speed, a young man named Zafir Anjum started a website to host chapters of a book he was writing. The site soon became known as the MFC Programmer's Sourcebook and it was Good. Soon, a few caring, sharing, and, in my case, easily distractable people started sending Zafir whitepapers to complement the chapters he had posted, and the site grew. As it grew, more people used his site, and more people contributed. One day it all grew so big that Zafir decided to change the name to CodeGuru and bring a few of us on board properly in order to spread the load and make the site Better. Life was good. The birds chirped each morning, developers read the site, participated in the forums, and sent angry email about broken links. I was running the day-to-day site business while Zafir fed the gnomes running the backend system. And the site grew. Soon Tom Archer came on board to help take some more of the load. There were also about 20 volunteers in varying degrees of busyness handling article submissions. Developers developed, authors submitted, advertisers advertised and links were broken. Then in July 1999 the EarthWeb machinery appeared and swallowed the site. Zafir went back home to India for some rest while the rest of us milled around, gnashing our teeth and wringing our hands now that we had been locked out of the site and could no longer post submissions or fix broken links. There was much wailing. After 3 months David Cunningham and I decided that there had been too much wailing and too much gnashing and so hunkered down and, pebble by pebble, started building a new site. It would be what we always dreamed could be done. It would be fun. It would be comprehensive. It would be running on flaky Windows servers instead of robust Linux servers. And it would be Orange. That day, November 15, 1999, CodeTools was born. Then we discovered CodeTools was trademarked so 2 weeks later CodeProject was born. Or reborn. Or renamed. Or whatever. cheers, Chris Maunder

                                  W Offline
                                  W Offline
                                  Weiye Chen
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #41

                                  Chris Maunder wrote: November 15, 1999 That's CodeProject Day! How about adding this day to Bob's dressing schedule? :) Weiye Chen When pursuing your dreams, don't forget to enjoy your life...

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                                  • P peterchen

                                    ...it was the one great site. Those who remember should not forget.


                                    Flirt harder, I'm a Coder
                                    mlog || Agile Programming | doxygen

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Marc Clifton
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #42

                                    peterchen wrote: Those who remember should not forget. And those who forgot shall never remember. ;P Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C#

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • C Chris Maunder

                                      OK boys and girls, gather round... A long, long time ago, back when the world was newer and the grass was greener and internet stocks were on speed, a young man named Zafir Anjum started a website to host chapters of a book he was writing. The site soon became known as the MFC Programmer's Sourcebook and it was Good. Soon, a few caring, sharing, and, in my case, easily distractable people started sending Zafir whitepapers to complement the chapters he had posted, and the site grew. As it grew, more people used his site, and more people contributed. One day it all grew so big that Zafir decided to change the name to CodeGuru and bring a few of us on board properly in order to spread the load and make the site Better. Life was good. The birds chirped each morning, developers read the site, participated in the forums, and sent angry email about broken links. I was running the day-to-day site business while Zafir fed the gnomes running the backend system. And the site grew. Soon Tom Archer came on board to help take some more of the load. There were also about 20 volunteers in varying degrees of busyness handling article submissions. Developers developed, authors submitted, advertisers advertised and links were broken. Then in July 1999 the EarthWeb machinery appeared and swallowed the site. Zafir went back home to India for some rest while the rest of us milled around, gnashing our teeth and wringing our hands now that we had been locked out of the site and could no longer post submissions or fix broken links. There was much wailing. After 3 months David Cunningham and I decided that there had been too much wailing and too much gnashing and so hunkered down and, pebble by pebble, started building a new site. It would be what we always dreamed could be done. It would be fun. It would be comprehensive. It would be running on flaky Windows servers instead of robust Linux servers. And it would be Orange. That day, November 15, 1999, CodeTools was born. Then we discovered CodeTools was trademarked so 2 weeks later CodeProject was born. Or reborn. Or renamed. Or whatever. cheers, Chris Maunder

                                      M Offline
                                      M Offline
                                      Marc Clifton
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #43

                                      Chris Maunder wrote: That day, November 15, 1999, CodeTools was born. Then we discovered CodeTools was trademarked so 2 weeks later CodeProject was born. You left off: And on the 7th day, Chris rested. (hmmm....) Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C#

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                                      • P Paul Charles

                                        Looks like Earthweb have finally got round to updating www.codeguru.com, still going have to go someway to beat codeproject. Especially in regards to how often articles appear and the quality of their formatting

                                        B Offline
                                        B Offline
                                        bryce
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #44

                                        far too many bloody ads and too many images on that site still looks messy Bryce --- Publitor, making Pubmed easy. http://www.sohocode.com/publitor

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • C Chris Maunder

                                          OK boys and girls, gather round... A long, long time ago, back when the world was newer and the grass was greener and internet stocks were on speed, a young man named Zafir Anjum started a website to host chapters of a book he was writing. The site soon became known as the MFC Programmer's Sourcebook and it was Good. Soon, a few caring, sharing, and, in my case, easily distractable people started sending Zafir whitepapers to complement the chapters he had posted, and the site grew. As it grew, more people used his site, and more people contributed. One day it all grew so big that Zafir decided to change the name to CodeGuru and bring a few of us on board properly in order to spread the load and make the site Better. Life was good. The birds chirped each morning, developers read the site, participated in the forums, and sent angry email about broken links. I was running the day-to-day site business while Zafir fed the gnomes running the backend system. And the site grew. Soon Tom Archer came on board to help take some more of the load. There were also about 20 volunteers in varying degrees of busyness handling article submissions. Developers developed, authors submitted, advertisers advertised and links were broken. Then in July 1999 the EarthWeb machinery appeared and swallowed the site. Zafir went back home to India for some rest while the rest of us milled around, gnashing our teeth and wringing our hands now that we had been locked out of the site and could no longer post submissions or fix broken links. There was much wailing. After 3 months David Cunningham and I decided that there had been too much wailing and too much gnashing and so hunkered down and, pebble by pebble, started building a new site. It would be what we always dreamed could be done. It would be fun. It would be comprehensive. It would be running on flaky Windows servers instead of robust Linux servers. And it would be Orange. That day, November 15, 1999, CodeTools was born. Then we discovered CodeTools was trademarked so 2 weeks later CodeProject was born. Or reborn. Or renamed. Or whatever. cheers, Chris Maunder

                                          B Offline
                                          B Offline
                                          bryce
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #45

                                          wheres my bloody Milo maunder? you should know better than to tell bedtime stories without Milo Bryce --- Publitor, making Pubmed easy. http://www.sohocode.com/publitor

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