
Practical insights from real-world cloud, data, and applied AI systems
When working with Blazor WebAssembly, JavaScript interop often feels straightforward—until it isn’t. One of the more subtle (and frustrating) issues I’ve run into involves Safari, user-initiated navigation, and async event handlers. This post documents a real-world lesson learned: why I intentionally avoid async when triggering browser navigation (like mailto:) from Blazor, even though async/await is…
Categories:
Written by
on
Sample rack servers; IKEA Galant cabinet as rack cabinet; Galant cabinet with sliding doors More to come…
Categories:
Written by
on
I wanted to buy PS5 for my son but couldn’t get one. I saw the listing on Wallmart.com and Gamestop.com. Tried to…
Categories:
Written by
on
ASP.NET Core comes with reasonable diagnostic logging; framework and application have access to API’s for structured logging. Log events are written out…
Categories:
Written by
on
These are required steps; SQL Server Integration Services Install Integration Services Create SSIS DB Catalog using SQL Server Management Studio Create and…
Categories:
Written by
on
ADO ai angular asian asp.net asp.net core azure ACA azure administration Azure Cloud Architect Azure Key Vault Azure Storage Blazor WebAssembly BLOB bootstrap Branch and Release flow c# c#; ef core css datatables design pattern docker excel framework Git HTML JavaScript jQuery json knockout lab LINQ linux powershell REST API smart home SQL Agent SQL server SSIS SSL SVG Icon typescript visual studio Web API window os wordpress
The information on this weblog is provided “as is,” without warranties of any kind, and confers no rights. The content reflects my personal views and does not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans, or strategies of any organization with which I am affiliated. Discussion and differing viewpoints are welcome; however, I reserve the right to moderate or remove comments that are abusive, profane, rude, or anonymous. Please keep the conversation respectful and constructive.