Fiddler is a Web Debugging Proxy which logs all HTTP(S) traffic between your computer and the Internet. Fiddler allows you to inspect all HTTP(S) traffic, set breakpoints, and "fiddle" with incoming or outgoing data. Fiddler includes a powerful event-based scripting subsystem, and can be extended using any .NET language.
Fiddler is freeware and can debug traffic from virtually any application, including Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Opera, and thousands more.
http://www.fiddler2.com/fiddler2/
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Sunday, March 28, 2010
10 Web Analytics Tools For Tracking Your Visitors
1. AWStats
AWStats comes pre-installed by many web hosting companies. Additionally, if you’re setting up your own servers, you can download it for your personal use. AWStats goes deeper into the referring sites’ information than most analytics packages, and is a perfect tool for monitoring whether someone is hotlinking files from your site. Besides being a great detective tool for bandwidth thieves, it offers all of the usual useful tools that you might expect from a statistics package.
2. eLogic
eLogic provides three levels of service based on your exact needs. If you need to track only one or two pages, they offer a stat counter that just offers you the most basic of reports. Their Webstats BASIC package is also free, but gives you more the usual tools you expect like referring sites, a history, demographics, and more. Finally if you’re a business or a larger site, you may sign up for their subscription program, Webstats PRO, that will give you a full history and more extensive tools.
3. Google Analytics
Google Analytics is arguably the most popular analytics package available for individual site owners. Google Analytics (or plain old “GA”) allows you to dig down deep into your stats to see breakdowns of individual regions, states/provinces, cities and numerous other items to better identify your site visitors. The wealth of data available is admirably balanced by a well-executed user interface, but it can still be overwhelming. The package integrates with AdWords and has ecommerce-specific tools to track sales.
4. ShinyStat
ShinyStat was initially designed to monitor visits to Italian web sites. Now it is available to sites all over the world, and offers software packages for the individual user, the professional user who needs to track marketing, and a business owner who needs to monitor sales and ROI. There is also a level of service for ISPs to install and include with their hosting accounts.
5. SiteMeter
SiteMeter has a free version for smaller bloggers with up to 100,000 monthly visitors that offers all of the usual tools a webmaster can expect such as tracking referrals, visit durations and so on. If you are launching a larger site and need more tools, there is a paid version based on your volume of visitors.
6. StatCounter
StatCounter might have a rather plain interface, but it deftly handles multi-author blogs, allowing you to easily assign unique codes to each author. While it is free and does work, you have to click on a link to see each analytic result on a separate page. Despite its unpolished looks, the site does offer you clearly readable stats on things such as keywords, traffic sources, and other useful information.
7. W3Counter
W3Counter comes in a free and paid version. With a free W3Counter account, you can track up to 5,000 page views a day across 10 websites and see all of the usual stats. In addition, you get a bonus that you can share your stats with anyone you like via widgets for your blog or an API that lets you build new tools. For sites with higher traffic, you can go for the Pro account that allows you to track up to 1 million views a month.
8. W3Perl
W3Perl differs from other analytics packages in that it doesn’t just measure web traffic, but also can parse the log files of email and RSS to measure just about anything you choose. You can set up the administration interface for web access and gain real-time stats from there.
9. Webalizer
Webalizer is written in C, which means that it is extremely fast and portable, and is a favorite choice of people who host their own servers. Many web hosts have this analytics package pre-installed for your use inside of their control panel. Webalizer doesn’t allow you to dive terribly in-depth into your data like some other packages, but it provides an excellent overview.
10. Woopra
Woopra is currently in a closed beta test, but it offers you a wealth of data for those who can get in. Real-time data are streamed from your site that appear on a map letting you graphically see where readers are coming from, what keywords brought them in, and referring sites. Woopra offers you a unique ability to open up a chat window with visitors of your choice as they browse your site. An unusual feature of this service is that the data is presented to you in a desktop application. WordPress users can install a plugin that lets them see this data in the dashboard of their blog.
AWStats comes pre-installed by many web hosting companies. Additionally, if you’re setting up your own servers, you can download it for your personal use. AWStats goes deeper into the referring sites’ information than most analytics packages, and is a perfect tool for monitoring whether someone is hotlinking files from your site. Besides being a great detective tool for bandwidth thieves, it offers all of the usual useful tools that you might expect from a statistics package.
2. eLogic
eLogic provides three levels of service based on your exact needs. If you need to track only one or two pages, they offer a stat counter that just offers you the most basic of reports. Their Webstats BASIC package is also free, but gives you more the usual tools you expect like referring sites, a history, demographics, and more. Finally if you’re a business or a larger site, you may sign up for their subscription program, Webstats PRO, that will give you a full history and more extensive tools.
3. Google Analytics
Google Analytics is arguably the most popular analytics package available for individual site owners. Google Analytics (or plain old “GA”) allows you to dig down deep into your stats to see breakdowns of individual regions, states/provinces, cities and numerous other items to better identify your site visitors. The wealth of data available is admirably balanced by a well-executed user interface, but it can still be overwhelming. The package integrates with AdWords and has ecommerce-specific tools to track sales.
4. ShinyStat
ShinyStat was initially designed to monitor visits to Italian web sites. Now it is available to sites all over the world, and offers software packages for the individual user, the professional user who needs to track marketing, and a business owner who needs to monitor sales and ROI. There is also a level of service for ISPs to install and include with their hosting accounts.
5. SiteMeter
SiteMeter has a free version for smaller bloggers with up to 100,000 monthly visitors that offers all of the usual tools a webmaster can expect such as tracking referrals, visit durations and so on. If you are launching a larger site and need more tools, there is a paid version based on your volume of visitors.
6. StatCounter
StatCounter might have a rather plain interface, but it deftly handles multi-author blogs, allowing you to easily assign unique codes to each author. While it is free and does work, you have to click on a link to see each analytic result on a separate page. Despite its unpolished looks, the site does offer you clearly readable stats on things such as keywords, traffic sources, and other useful information.
7. W3Counter
W3Counter comes in a free and paid version. With a free W3Counter account, you can track up to 5,000 page views a day across 10 websites and see all of the usual stats. In addition, you get a bonus that you can share your stats with anyone you like via widgets for your blog or an API that lets you build new tools. For sites with higher traffic, you can go for the Pro account that allows you to track up to 1 million views a month.
8. W3Perl
W3Perl differs from other analytics packages in that it doesn’t just measure web traffic, but also can parse the log files of email and RSS to measure just about anything you choose. You can set up the administration interface for web access and gain real-time stats from there.
9. Webalizer
Webalizer is written in C, which means that it is extremely fast and portable, and is a favorite choice of people who host their own servers. Many web hosts have this analytics package pre-installed for your use inside of their control panel. Webalizer doesn’t allow you to dive terribly in-depth into your data like some other packages, but it provides an excellent overview.
10. Woopra
Woopra is currently in a closed beta test, but it offers you a wealth of data for those who can get in. Real-time data are streamed from your site that appear on a map letting you graphically see where readers are coming from, what keywords brought them in, and referring sites. Woopra offers you a unique ability to open up a chat window with visitors of your choice as they browse your site. An unusual feature of this service is that the data is presented to you in a desktop application. WordPress users can install a plugin that lets them see this data in the dashboard of their blog.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
.NET 4 - Whats new?
.NET 4 contains new functionality and improvements throughout the framework.
1. Code Contracts
System.Diagnostics.Contracts provides a language-agnostic way to express coding assumptions in .NET programs
2. Parallel Extensions
The Parallel Computing Platform team worked with us to add the Task Parallel Library (TPL), Coordination Data Structures, and Parallel LINQ (PLINQ) to the BCL in .NET 4.
3. BigInteger
System.Numerics.BigInteger is an arbitrary-precision integer data type.
4.Variance annotations
C# and VB now support safe co- and contra-variance for generic interface and delegate types.
5.Tuples (new in Beta 1)
We’ve added common Tuple types in the BCL to facilitate language interoperability and to reduce duplication in the framework.
6.SortedSet
We’ve added a SortedSet collection along with a new ISet interface. SortedSet uses a self-balancing tree which maintains data in sorted order for performance guarantees with insertion, deletion, and searches. Both the new SortedSet and the existing HashSet implement ISet.
7.File System Enumeration Improvements
System.IO.Directory and System.IO.DirectoryInfo have new APIs for enumerating the file system that return IEnumerables instead of arrays.
8.MemoryMappedFiles
System.IO.MemoryMappedFiles exposes the memory mapping functionality provided by Windows as first-class managed APIs.
9.Registry Improvements
10 Globalization data updated to Unicode 5.1 and ResourceManager Improvements
1. Code Contracts
System.Diagnostics.Contracts provides a language-agnostic way to express coding assumptions in .NET programs
2. Parallel Extensions
The Parallel Computing Platform team worked with us to add the Task Parallel Library (TPL), Coordination Data Structures, and Parallel LINQ (PLINQ) to the BCL in .NET 4.
3. BigInteger
System.Numerics.BigInteger is an arbitrary-precision integer data type.
4.Variance annotations
C# and VB now support safe co- and contra-variance for generic interface and delegate types.
5.Tuples (new in Beta 1)
We’ve added common Tuple types in the BCL to facilitate language interoperability and to reduce duplication in the framework.
6.SortedSet
We’ve added a SortedSet
7.File System Enumeration Improvements
System.IO.Directory and System.IO.DirectoryInfo have new APIs for enumerating the file system that return IEnumerable
8.MemoryMappedFiles
System.IO.MemoryMappedFiles exposes the memory mapping functionality provided by Windows as first-class managed APIs.
9.Registry Improvements
10 Globalization data updated to Unicode 5.1 and ResourceManager Improvements
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Test your web page on multiple browsers

Browsershots makes screenshots of your web design in different browsers. It is a free open-source online service created by Johann C. Rocholl. When you submit your web address, it will be added to the job queue. A number of distributed computers will open your website in their browser. Then they will make screenshots and upload them to the central server here.
Learn more... http://browsershots.org/
Build Ajax-enabled Web 2.0 Apps in Minutes!

Iron Speed Designer is a .NET code generator that creates visually stunning, feature-rich Web 2.0 applications that are easy to customize and ready to deploy. Turbocharge your Web application development today!
Speed Web application development
Dramatically reduce development costs
Impress customers and clients
Boost application ROI
Learn more... http://www.ironspeed.com/
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Color Picker
Its one of frequent task for web developer is to change the web page color. Here ar some tool which simplyfy the life of developer.
ColorPic
========
1. Easily pick any color from the screen
2. Colors shown in hex and decimal
3. Adjust Hue, Saturation, Value, Red, Green and Blue values
4. Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black percentages shown
5. Easy to use with any other program
6. Resizable magnification area
7. Overlay a grid for quick colorpicker alignment
8. Use arrow keys to nudge mouse pointer
9. Save multiple palettes of colors automatically
10. WebSafe Colors and names displayed
11. Snap to nearest WebSafe color
12. Point sample, 3x3 or 5x5 pixel color sampling
13. Adjust color with four advanced color mixers
14. Edit colorpicker values after selection easily
15. Easy to use collapsible sections
16 Works with Firefox, Internet Explorer
Further refer the url
http://www.iconico.com/colorpic/
Online tool for color picker.
http://www.colorpicker.com/
Convert VB.NET to C#
Conver your .NET CODE through this tool
http://www.developerfusion.com/tools/convert/vb-to-csharp/
http://www.developerfusion.com/tools/convert/vb-to-csharp/
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