On Thu, 18 Sep 2008 22:20:10 -0400, "Soundhaspriority" <nowhere@nowhere.com> wrote: Chris, is there any kind of a "roadhouse" scene where you are? Not in any way interesting to ya. Little Rock is locally called "No Rock at All" for good reason. A band called Evanescence (hope I haven't butchered their spelling too bad) apparently came out of here without my ever having even heard of 'em
On Sat, 29 Mar 2008 20:29:17 -0800, walkinay@nv.net (hank alrich) wrote: Three two/three tops get moved. The problem is immediate storage, which is borderline nonexistent, and already uber-consumed by mixer rack, mon cabs, mic stands, and you already know the rest of the story. Ouch, but that's really always the case in the real world of bars and restaurants - hard work and no space. Gotta
On Feb 14, 6:52 pm, poisoned rose <buyBattles-Mirro...@amazon.com> wrote: zekeh...@yahoo.com wrote: Last 45? I'm guessing a reissue of The Raspberries' "Go All The Way", around 1985 or so. I think the last one I bought was a Spinanes single, circa 1999. See the May 6, 2004 entry: http://mysticalbeast.blogspot.com/2004_05_01_archive.html (But the mp3 links don't
Chodziło mi o to, że Controller w Spring MVC jest POJO - w szczególności nie dziedziczy po HttpServlet. To ułatwia testowanie logiki poza kontenerem, mockowanie i pozostałe dobrodziejstwa wnoszone przez Spring. Klasa kontrolera w Spring MVC powinna w zasadzie tylko implementować interfejs Controller (banalnie prosty), choć zwykle w aplikacjach rozszerza się jedną z gotowych implementacji (jest