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Greg Turner

Main Quotes Index

Issue #215, Section #2 (19 Mar 2004: Investigating Arch for Revision Control)
Issue #212, Section #4 (27 Feb 2004: Implementing NdrClientCall/NdrClientCall2)
Issue #206, Section #2 (23 Jan 2004: CodeWeavers CrossOver Compatibility Center)
Issue #200, Section #4 (12 Dec 2003: RPC Info)
Issue #194, Section #5 (31 Oct 2003: Installshield 7 Notes)
Issue #194, Section #8 (31 Oct 2003: Stubless Proxies)
Issue #192, Section #3 (17 Oct 2003: Integrating Start Menu Shortcuts)
Issue #186, Section #6 (5 Sep 2003: Exception Handling)
Issue #182, Section #3 (8 Aug 2003: Beginnings of Microsoft Installer Support)
Issue #182, Section #5 (8 Aug 2003: DirectX / Operation Flashpoint)
Issue #181, Section #5 (1 Aug 2003: Library of Microsoft Compression Formats)
Issue #179, Section #7 (18 Jul 2003: CAB Update)
Issue #170, Section #5 (16 May 2003: RPC Documentation Update)
Issue #170, Section #8 (16 May 2003: Improving Exception Handling)
Issue #163, Section #5 (28 Mar 2003: Wine & Services)
Issue #156, Section #3 (7 Feb 2003: RPC Data Marshalling (cont'd))
Issue #155, Section #4 (31 Jan 2003: RPC Data Marshalling)
Issue #154, Section #3 (24 Jan 2003: InstallShield 6 Insight)
Issue #154, Section #6 (24 Jan 2003: Executing Batch Files)
Issue #148, Section #7 (13 Dec 2002: MS Installer or Lack Thereof)
Issue #145, Section #11 (22 Nov 2002: Threads and CoInitialize)
Issue #143, Section #5 (8 Nov 2002: RPCSS.exe Replacement)
Issue #142, Section #6 (1 Nov 2002: Wine/Windows Security Concerns)
Issue #142, Section #8 (1 Nov 2002: IDL Generated obj_* Headers)
Issue #141, Section #2 (24 Oct 2002: RPC Update)
Issue #141, Section #9 (24 Oct 2002: Running Native Windows Utilities)
Issue #139, Section #3 (10 Oct 2002: Creating Test Framework for New DLL)
Issue #138, Section #5 (3 Oct 2002: Remote Procedure Call Patch)

 

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Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0.