 OpenAccess ORM Express Telerik OpenAccess is an Enterprise-grade ORM that does the data access plumbing in desktop and web applications. Supporting both forward and reverse mapping, the tool offers transparent persistence for your DAL and business objects. OpenAccess ORM provides tight Visual Studio integration and allows you to seamlessly create database independent code. OpenAccess ORM Express Edition provides the same functionality as the commercial version, but supports only the free databases (MS SQL Server Express, Oracle Express, MySQL and Firebird). List of features [ Click HERE ] ... Check tomorrow for another freebie for developers !!!
SplendidCRM Software, Inc., a provider of Microsoft-centric Customer Relationship Management (CRM) solutions for open-source use, announced the launch of Version 3.0 of SplendidCRM. The release of Version 3.0 marks a milestone as it introduces the SplendidCRM Workflow Engine as a flagship feature in the new SplendidCRM Enterprise product. "For many companies, workflow is a critical feature and we are pleased to be able to tightly integrate SplendidCRM with Microsoft Windows Workflow Foundation," said Paul Rony, President of SplendidCRM.
The Community version is FREE ! http://www.splendidcrm.com/
I get between 500 and 1000 email a day. Many, MANY, are from developers asking for help. Now before anyone gets angry, I love helping developers solve problems. But… Lately I’ve been getting more and more “unnecessary” questions. My problem with this is that I spend several hours answering these email every day and taking the time to answer questions that could have been easily answered with a little proactivity on the part of the asker, means that I have far less time to work on the harder questions that folks really can’t solve without a little help. If your question is for an opinion like what’s the best approach to do something or what book do you suggest, then by all means ask away. If you want help writing code, I thought I’d write some guidelines to the process of emailing a question.
1. Try stuff BEFORE you email.
2. SEARCH FIRST – Before your email, please use the search engine of your choice to look for an answer. It’s staggering the number of times I get an email question and I find the answer on the first page of search engine results. I know it’s easier to just send an email, but it’s only easier for the person on the SENDING end.
3. Check www.asp.net/learn - there are tons of samples, videos and tutorials.
4. Read the error messages if your project doesn’t build, a little research on the message will likely reveal the result.
5. Ask in the www.asp.net forums. Yes, it’s slower but asking 1-on-1 is selfish because it helps only you. Taking the time to ask in the forums contributes to the community. 6. If you have done all that and still have a problem then by all means contact me.
7. Please don’t PM me - even if I get your message, I don’t get your email address to reply to.
8. Send me direct email at my Microsoft.com address or via the contact option on this website.
9. Explain your question IN DETAIL. Include the problem or question and any error messages; explain what is happening and how it differs from the behavior that you desire.
10. Remember, sentences have periods and email has paragraphs. If you cannot write the explanation clearly, there is little chance that I can help you since I won’t understand your issue. To my non-English speaking friends, PLEASE take extra care in your translations so that I can be off accurate help.
11. Please send code ONLY as follows.
a. Send a Zip file of a complete solution directory that is buildable in Visual Studio or Visual Web Developer 2008. (I do not have ready access to any other versions at the moment.) b. DO NOT paste code into your email !!!! c. Do not send code that does not compile. d. Do not send projects that to not build (unless that is the issue.)
12. If you are asking for help with a behavioral problem in your code, I probably can’t help you if I can’t run your code. This means creating a local database etc. before you email the project.
13. Once you have a solution, please go back to the forums and post the solution so that anyone else who has the problem later will find the answer.
Following these steps will help reduce my email to the questions that don’t have readily found answers and will give me the time to help ell the developers who really need it. Many thanks in advance.
 I go to ALOT of developer events. Usually, they are work - meaning I probably wouldn't go if I were a retired Millionaire. DevLink was AWESOME. It was kind of link that perfect summer back in school when all the right people were in the right place and the right mood and the sun was shining and the VIBE was just happening. The basics were all there, Tennessee was very sunny but not too hot, the people are very nice, the MTSU campus is super (and the Sororities were pledging while we were there). John Kellar (DevLnk Chairman) and all the folks with the DevLink organization did a simply AMAZING job and because the event is SO cool the speaker pool is a "WHo's Who". I went to some great session like Sara Ford's session on Open Source at Microsoft and Todd Anglin's session Silverlight (who thought 3 a three hour session would seem too SHORT.) There was some fun interpersonal stuff too. I spent most of the event sparing with Ted Somebody :) Actually I'm talking about Ted Neward - who's not only really smart but also really fun. (Thanks Ted for being a good sport and for giving as good as you get. I hope they don't have you do the closing keynote next year, I'd have to wear a helmet.) And, like many of us, we spend the event waiting for Sara Ford to do something REALLY outrageous. (We're STILL waiting :) I got to be a guest on Deep Fried Bytes, which will be available soon. (http://deepfriedbytes.com/) GRATUITOUS PLUG - DeepFriedBytes is just getting up too speed and they need sponsors. Have a look and see if you can help them out ! Of course, Carl Franklin and Richard Campbell were there and they event did a DNR episode from the after-party. [ Click HERE to listen to the show. ] But the HIGHLIGHT for me was the OpenSpaces. Alan Stevens organized ad managed the OpenSaces and they were OFF the hook. (Thanks Alan for an AMAZING job). I'd been to OpenSpaces before and had a less than great experience. Alan did a GREAT job of facilitating without controlling the flow. And if you were an attendee..... $50 Next year - I'm going to fly out and take the BUS !!!! (http://netcave.org/GetOnTheBusYrsquoall.aspx) Also, I declare a contest for next year - who can come from the farthest distance away. It's a real gem of a weekend !! Hope to see you at the next one
Kentico CMS Free Edition Since the free license for .NET User Groups was very successful, we decided to release a Free Edition of Kentico CMS for everyone! It can be used for both personal and commercial projects. It’s intended for smaller corporate sites, on-line communities and personal sites (it also supports blogging). The Free Edition supports: - WYSIWYG editing - Rapid web site development without complex programming - SEO-friendly URLs - Open API and detailed documentation - Flexible menu controls - News - Blogs - RSS feeds - Forums - Polls - On-line forms - Product catalog with shopping cart and PayPal support - Image gallery ... and it comes with 3 starter sites – Corporate Site, E-commerce Site and Personal Site. The Free Edition is limited to 1 administrator, 1 editor, 1000 pages and 100 site members, plus there are some limits for particular modules (http://www.kentico.com/cms-asp-net-features/Feature-Matrix.aspx) and a requirement to keep Powered by Kentico logo on the web site. The Free Edition can be downloaded at http://www.kentico.com/Download/Free-edition.aspx. Visit us at PDC Kentico will be exhibiting at this year’s PDC in L.A, please be sure to stop by at booth #419! Here are some site using Kentico ! http://chennaiitpro.net http://www.acsug.co.nz http://www.FLPSUG.com http://www.madnug.net http://www.chadnug.com http://mankatodotnet.com http://www.dotnetbuzzdelhi.com
Next week I have a week full of meetings on things like. - The Next Version of Web Forms
- Dynamic Data v.now and v.next
- ASP.NET 4.0
But the BIG part of the week will be spent on strategic planning for www.ASP.net web sites in the coming year. We want to answer questions like .... - What's the NEXT great multi-media experience for developers ?
- What social networking features are missing and wanted on www.asp.net ?
- What improvements do we need to blogs, forums, RSS, etc.?
- What's missing that developers really want?
- What's broken and needs to be fixed?
So, while I'm thinking about it THIS week, why not send me an email (use th elink on this page) and let me know what YOU think of the subject !
Today the XNA Team has launched Dream-Build-Play 2008.
In Dream-Build-Play 2008 you can build your dream game to compete with other game developers around the world. This year’s contest will feature Xbox360 development only and to ensure that everyone has access we will be giving away one free 12-Month XNA Creators Club Trial membership to everyone that registers. Contestants will compete for $75,000 in prizes and the bragging rights to say their game was the best. Additionally, one of the top ten finalists will win an opportunity for an Xbox LIVE publishing contract. For more information log on to www.dreambuildplay.com
· The XNA team has launched Dream-Build-Play 2008.
· $75,000 in prizes and the chance to receive an Xbox Live Arcade Contract.
· Create and deploy Xbox360 games using XNA Game Studio 2.0
· Everyone who registers will receive a FREE 12-Month Trial Creator Club Membership
Want to join the bloggers at weblogs.asp.net ?
Just go here to read the terms of use. (http://www.microsoft.com/info/cpyright.mspx)
If you agree to the Terms and Agree not to change or add any advertising on the site then email me and state that you agree to the terms.
Make sure you send me your EXISTING user ID on www.asp.net (you mush create this yourself.)
Then, before your first post GO HERE and read the post before you start posting.
It's that easy !
I was supposed to leave on Wednesday for Mix Essentials South Africa next week.
Unfortunately, my paternal grandmother died early this morning and I'll be forgoing the trip to stay home, support my family and see Muth (as she was called - short for Mother) or Ginny (as I called her) off on her journey to whatever comes next.
I agonized a bit over the decision. Ginny was a strong, pragmatic women and would have told me to travel. Many Many thanks to my great boss Simon, who never EVER asks me to put work before my family, to Brad Abrams who was to be my travel companion, who is so completely understanding, and who will have to pick up much of the slack that my absence creates, and to Microsoft South Africa who is also being very understanding, and who I owe a visit in the near future !
I must confess that natural events such as these seldom catch me off guard, but this one has, I grew up just down he street from Ginny and she has always had a special place in my Heart.
I'll be a it slow reconnecting, but am already feeling a strong urge to settle in for the summer and PRODUCE ! The spring travel always leaves me feeling this way.
So.... Before I go prolific ! If you don't subscribe to my blog (www.MisfitGeek.com) I hope you will.
My summer is YOURS ! I have video series in the works on ASP.NET Security and Data Access, and some Windows Forms stuff.
What would YOU like me to add to the list ?
Patterns ?
Architecture ?
ASP.NET Themes and Skins ?
Controls ?
More AJAX Techniques ?
You're the boss(es) !

I'm home from TechEd Developer 2008 (for a few days anyway.) I have to admin, I've been on the road more than every other week since early March and I'm feeling very burned out.
I arrived at TechEd a bit less enthusiastic than I usually do, but it ended up being a great trip.
I arrived Monday afternoon and headed down to the convention center where I immediately started running into old teammates, partners, and friends.
The conference sessions started Tuesday morning with a keynote by non other than Bill Gates (his last as a full time Microsoft employee.)
Check out the BillG's last day video HERE.
Then Soma joined him to show off the latest from DevDiv !
John Galloway has an interesting summary of the Keynote HERE.
Though I spent much of the week meeting with partners and various DevDiv team members, I did get to see some GREAT talks.
David Chappell did a session entitled - Choosing Communication Styles: SOAP/WS-* vs. REST
I've seen David present many times over the years and he is absolutely one of the best speakers in Technology. His talks are not only full of facts and useful opinions as well as very entertaining, but he's the kinds of speaker that you hear and then spend days brain storming about what you heard.
Read more about David HERE.
Jeff Prosise did great talks on ASP.NET Asynchronous Programming and ASP.NET AJAX internals. (Though after seeing his talk I had to come up with new demos for my AJAX talk :(
Tom Gallagher (co-author of the super Developer Security Book, Hunting Security Bugs [ Click HERE ] ) gave an awesome talk - Making Security Testing Part of Everyday Development.
All I can say is - keep this guy away from your network :)
On Thursday I gave a talk on developing applications with the Microsoft AJAX stack. I had 360 attendees, which was great since Jeff did his MS AJAX talk earlier in the same day, and many folks stayed around for over an hour of Q&A after the talk.
On Friday I did a FishBowl session on Developer Security with Georgeo Pulikkathara (it will be available on line is a week or so and I'll post the link on SecureDeveloper.com)
Later Friday I did a talk on PHP on the Windows / IIS 7 Platform !
I arrived home EXHAUSTED - home for a week and then off to South Africa for Re-Mix in Johannesburg and Cape Town.
THEN - I'm home to CODE FOR THE SUMMER !
Cool Name Huh ?
Mustafa Basgun has created a pretty cool info site for ASP.NET Developers
Click [ HERE ] to pay him a visit!

The folks at Internet.com are running this cool content.
ENTER BY THE 15th !!
Description:
The RIA Run challenge is designed for you to showcase your knowledge of Silverlight 2 to the world— and potentially win prizes for it. By taking advantage of such Silverlight 2 features as layout manager support, two-way data-binding support, control template and skinning support, core form controls and built-in layout management controls, you can show the world what you can do with the most advanced RIA platform today.
[ Click HERE for more info. ]
... or so says eWeek. [ HERE ]
Scott is in fine company with 10 of the 100 most important (according to eWeek) being Microsofties.
3. Steve Ballmer CEO, Microsoft
6. Jean-Philippe Courtois President, Microsoft International, Microsoft
12. Kevin Turner COO, Microsoft
13. Ray Ozzie Chief software architect, Microsoft
26. Bob Muglia Senior vice president, Server and Tools Business, Microsoft
28. Scott Guthrie Corporate vice president, .Net Developer Platform, Microsoft
37. Michael Howard Principal security program manager, Microsoft
46. Tony Scott CIO, Microsoft
67. Bill Hilf Director of platform strategy, Microsoft
82. Bronwen Matthews Security program manager, Microsoft
Now, we developers know Scott is WAY higher than 28 :)
Applied Innovations, Kentico Partner to Offer Unique Solution for .NET User Groups
Kentico Software, maker of Kentico CMS, and Applied Innovations, a Microsoft Gold Certified provider of Windows-based Hosting solutions, announced today the two companies have partnered to offer a unique free Web site solution for .NET User Groups.
Boca Raton, Fla. (PRWEB) April 8, 2008 -- Kentico Software (http://www.kentico.com), maker of Kentico CMS, and Applied Innovations (http://www.appliedi.net), a Microsoft Gold Certified provider of Windows-based Hosting solutions, announced today the two companies have partnered to offer a unique free Web site solution for .NET User Groups.
The solution, available through Kentico's partnership with Applied Innovations, allows local .NET developer communities to collaborate between community members.
We are excited to further our relationship with the .NET user community as we continue to build a line of robust hosting services geared toward developers
Users will receive a free license of Kentico CMS Enterprise Edition (valued at $1,499) and a ready-to-use Web site template that helps .NET User Groups to share information with group members; inform members about group meetings; publish articles and presentations from the meetings; communicate in discussion forums; distribute e-mail newsletters; create blogs; share files and photos; and create member-only areas.
The custom Web site template was created to meet the specific needs of .NET user groups. The template allows groups to focus on their community activities, rather than exhaust resources building a Web site.
".NET User Groups provide valuable information and training for their members and we are happy that we can support their activities," said Petr Palas, founder and CEO of Kentico Software. "We are happy that we found a professional hosting partner, Applied Innovations, to offer free web hosting for .NET User Groups. Users get a complete solution and they can start editing their new Web site instantly."
Applied Innovations will provide a free hosting account for .NET user groups to host their Kentico CMS installation.
"We are excited to further our relationship with the .NET user community as we continue to build a line of robust hosting services geared toward developers," said Jess Coburn, CEO, Applied Innovations. "In partnering with Kentico Software, we are able to leverage their advanced CMS solution to create an out-of-box collaboration solution for .NET user communities."
.NET User Groups can sign up for a free license and hosting at http://www.kentico.com/dng.aspx. To learn more about Applied Innovations, please visit http://www.appliedi.net.
About Kentico CMS Kentico CMS is an affordable ($499 to $1499 per Web site) web content management solution providing a complete set of features for creating interactive Web 2.0 sites on the Microsoft ASP.NET platform. It supports content/design separation, workflow, permissions, multilingual support, full-text search, SEO, on-line forms, image galleries, forums, blogs, polls and 70+ configurable web parts. It's being used by more than 600 web sites in 55 countries. The clients include Gibson, Bayer, Guinness, Deutsche Telekom and others. Kentico CMS trial version is available at http://www.kentico.com.
About Applied Innovations Based in Boca Raton, Florida, Applied Innovations (http://www.appliedi.net) is a Microsoft Gold Certified Web hosting provider specializing in Windows Web hosting. Since 1999, Applied Innovations has hosted thousands of domains for small to medium sized businesses internationally, offering world-class service and support at competitive and economical rates.
Look at the stuff students can download for FREE !
This program was announced in February but it seems like alot of students still don't know about it.
Students, get the details HERE.
Say hello to Alice. [ More info here. ]
From their web site......
In Alice's interactive interface, students drag and drop graphic tiles to create a program, where the instructions correspond to standard statements in a production oriented programming language, such as Java, C++, and C#. Alice allows students to immediately see how their animation programs run, enabling them to easily understand the relationship between the programming statements and the behavior of objects in their animation. By manipulating the objects in their virtual world, students gain experience with all the programming constructs typically taught in an introductory programming course.
Please joind me for these 2 webcasts this Thursday and Friday. VWG is a cool FREE set of tools to accelerate your ASP.NET AJAX and Silverlight Web Development. Guy Peled, CTO of Visual WebGui is joining me and he will build applications live during the webcats.
Click below to register - attendance is FREE !
Live From Redmond: Visual WebGui: An Enterprise AJAX application in 20 minutes.
It is all about simplicity: Simplicity in programming next generation complex AJAX application that makes the productivity difference. In this Webcast we will demystify Visual WebGui. We will build a fully blown application in less than 20 minutes, and strip off the covers, showing you how you can cut your development cycle by as much as 90% . Visual WebGui is open source, so you can dive into the code. Throughout the webcast we will demonstrate that while VWG enables rapid application development (RAD) , the developer is free to create custom controls, wrap third party controls , invoke HTML resources and interop with standard ASP.NET applications like DNN and others, all in a matter of minutes.
3/27/2008 11:00 AM Pacific Time (US & Canada)| Duration:60 Minutes
Live From Redmond: Visual WebGui: Silverlight for line-of-business application.
In this webcast we will "light up", in minutes, the fully blown line-of-business application that we built in our previous webcast adding the rich look and feel of Silverlight as well as its enhanced performance. You will see how we accomplish this by a "push of a button". We will demonstrate how to make WinForms controls available to your web application and how you can style your UI by using fully enabled Expression Blend. The outcome is a very light footprint client, unaffected by application size and weight, and as a bonus, secured by design. You will be shown how you can, extend, invoke, interop and customize your application using Visual WebGui.
3/28/2008 11:00 AM Pacific Time (US & Canada)| Duration:60 Minutes
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About the Live From Redmond series. This series of Live Meeting presentations are designed specifically for the community by members of the Microsoft product teams. The presentations are all done by actual team members working on the specific technology, and are a great way to hear from and ask your questions directly to the product team.
If you have ever been on hold waiting for a conference call with Microsoft to begin, then this video will ring bells for you, if not make you laugh out loud. Since I was on campus last week I spent time trying to catch our Dev Leaders Like ScottGu, Shanku, and BradA doing stuff like you see in the video, but didn't have any luck ! Click Here if you need to see the video at YouTube!
Some of you have noticed :) there are a number of new bloggers on weblogs.asp.net.
Some are adding great posts of technical value.
Others are posting less useful information like letting us know that the overslept today.
Thanks to all of you have have emailed me to share your frustrations (ScottGu included.)
I've been doing feature planning for some time to add much greater "Social Networking" functionality to www.asp.net including blog and post rating and a variety of related RSS features.
Unfortunately, developer resources are limited, etc, etc, etc.
In the mean time, if you are a brand new blogger and have noticed that your blog posts are not appearing in the main aggregation, it's because you made a non technical post and included it in the main feed, and it got some negative attention.
As a compromise, I'll be manually tailoring the aggregate RSS feed to filter out blogs that are still "learning the ropes".
Don't worry if you get filtered, it's just temporary until the community is ready for you :)
To avoid this, simply keep your non-technical posts out of the aggregate feed.
It's easy to do !

When you write a new blog post, BEFORE YOU CLICK PUBLISH !, hit the advanced options tab and click NO next to "Publish to sites aggregate list."
The old timers here will love you for it !
It's very hard to attend an event on-campus. Though my job is based in Redmond, I live in New England. Coming in for an event, there are too many people to meet with, friends to bump into, things to catch up on, and regular work to get done (Not to mention the first couple days of Jet Lag) Still, I've been spending most of my days at the Lang.NET Symposium. Lang.NET is a small event (there are about 75 people in the room as I write this) filled with a who's who of Programming Languages. Yesterday I sat next to Anders Hejlsberg while listening to Jason Zander's Opening Keynote. Then Anders gave us a tour of cool new stuff in C# 3.0 Jim Hugunin (Jython, JPython, AspectJ, IronPython) gave a cool talk titled "Vision of the DRL) where he did a bit of Real Time Robotics programming using Microsoft Robotics Studio, Lego Robots, and Iron Python (not to mention a few balloon animal tricks !) Then, we had Martin Malay on implementing a language that Targets the Dynamic Language Runtime (DLR) Charles Nutter (The JRuby Guy) and John Rose (VM Guy at Sun) talked about multiple language implementation on the Java VM Today's highlights (so far) have included Erik Meijer talked top us about his recent project, Volta ! As I look around the room I see some great faces too. Miguel de Icaza (The MONO and Moonlight guy!) is here and presenting tomorrow. Tomas Petricek (The Phalanger Guy) is presenting later today. John Lam (The IronRuby guy) is presenting tomorrow. So will Luke Hoban who will present on F# And just to add some icing on the cake.... Don Box has the last talk of the day on Modeling and Languages. It sure is a hard room to feel smart in :)
Growing an on-line community is hard.
At www.asp.net we spend LOTS of time thinking about how to continue to grow the ASP.NET community and continue to add value.
One of the necessary factors in growing an on-line community is to add members and recently we've added about 150 bloggers.
There have been some mixed reactions to this growth. Many folks are glad to see the ASP.NET blog ecosystem finally adding new bloggers.
Still, a few folks long for the older, quieter feeds :)
The first thing that I encourage you to consider is that "new blogger glut" will soon subside. The enthusiasm of all the new bloggers is great and many folks are posting away like crazy. It takes time to become an effective blogger, figuring out what kinds of things people find useful and what they don't.
Natural selection will tailor the aggregate feed according to the wishes of the community at large in a short time.
What's more, MANY of the new bloggers are developers of significant accomplishment who will, as their "real jobs" afford them the time to do, add very useful information to the growing knowledge base at weblogs.asp.net.
If you really don't want "new blogger" posts in your feed from weblogs.asp.net you can do this......
If you do this, don't forget to visit the weblogs.asp.net home page so that you can start to pick out the new bloggers that you do want to subscribe to.
Also, you can get the "new bloggers at weblogs.asp.net" in a separate feed here.
New Bloggers - You don't HAVE to include your posts in the general feed.
Set the Aggregate List option to "No" on your post and it won't appear in the site's aggregate feed.
In the long term, I'm working of a collection of interesting options for tailoring feeds.
But... I need your help !
- Start by linking to the blogs that you read or like from your own blog or web page.
- Feel free to start with mine at www.JoeOn.net :)
- Use whatever social networking link rating mechanism you like to link to good posts ! (Digg, etc.)
- Add comments to the posts that are useful to you. (Both activities will provide use with useful statistics)
- Email me your suggestions
Some of the things I'm considering for helping the best blogs bubble to the top.
- Member rated "Best Posts" Feed and Page
- Member Rated "Best Blogs" Feed and Page
- Keyword / Tag Filtered Feeds
- A Member "My Feeds" feature (an aggregate of the feeds you choose.)
- A "Share Your OPLM List (Like Amazon Lists)
In addition to emailing me your suggestions about how to implement the best feed options on our site(s), please respectfully help educate the new bloggers on how to become GREAT bloggers. They have decided to start blogging because they WANT to contribute. It would be a shame to scare them away with the rudeness that sometime accompanies on-line frustrations.
Example: Don't tell them, "your code sucks", take a few minutes to post your "improvements" or comment on what you think might make the code better.
Also, remember what you think sucks might be exactly what someone else needed.
Growth is always a bit painful, but in this case it's a "chicken or the egg" type question. To increase the VALUE (which is our goal) we need to grow the community, as we grow the community, we need to tailor the quality, but we need to do it as a community.
I hope folks with strong opinions will share them with me I'm really hoping 2008 is a year where we collaboratively take Microsoft online communities to a new level of value for all of us.
I'm here.... I'm listening !
I've added 150 new bloggers to the ASP.NET community since yesterday morning and many folks have asked me how to set up Windows LiverWriter to work with their new blog.
First, go to the "Get Live" site and click on the "Get it Free' button.
When you see this dialog - click RUN.
Then, click run AGAIN !
Then Accept this :)
Choose the "Live" features that you want to install INCLUDING Writer !
Installation start automatically after you click "Add to Installation"
Choose "I already have a weblog set up" and click NEXT
Select "Another weblog service" and click NEXT.
Enter your weblog URL (the one I mailed to you) and your www.asp.net username and password.
Then click NEXT
Set the weblog type to "Community Server"
Set the remote posting URL to http://weblogs.asp.net/metablog.ashx
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