The most recent content from our members.
It'd be great to be able to freeze the column names / column titles on the Manage Nodes page just like in Excel. Currently when one scrolls down on the Manage Nodes page it scrolls the blue high lighted area in the image. This means that if you have a large number of nodes the "Group by" information and the column names…
In part one this series, I described installing the Visual Basic IDE. In part two, we created the foundation of the bandwidth calculator with all the necessary objects put into place. Now, in part three, we'll discuss the coding. Lesson 4 - The Coding The first question you may have is, "Where does the code go?" From the…
In part one of this series, I discussed installing and setting up your Visual Basic environment in preparation for creating a bandwidth calculator for use with SAM's component monitors. In this installment, I'll explain how to create the visual elements of the calculator. Lesson 3 - The Build First, open Visual Basic and…
The ability to choose link type when creating a new widget would be extremely useful. Some of the widgets we use in production make use of mailto links and rdp links for various alerts/statuses (Who is oncall for example). Having the option to select which link type we'd like to use rather than defaulting to a weblink…
With working from home being the new normal here's a way to see how many users are remote vs still working onsite. Requirements: * Horizon View Servers * Horizon View Template downloaded from Thwack * F5 Connectivity (It's what this widget relies on but feel free to adapt to your needs) Horizon View while being a…
As I continue to explore the possibilities with the new Modern Dashboard in 2020.2 I decided a visual view of Volume Capacity would work better than relying on the "60 days until volume is full" oob alert. So I built this: Sorted by percent used descending helps prioritize which drives need attention asap. Here's the Swql…
Programming is Fun I'm sure many of you reading this have been exposed to at least a little bit of a programming language, be it HTML, PowerShell, VBScript, or whatever. Some of you may enjoy programming, some may not. (I know I do.) Let me begin by saying that it is virtually impossible for any single programmer to know…
If you've read Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of this series, then this is the one you've been waiting for. The code! Before you get too excited, let me clarify a few things, for the record: * The only way to get this calculator is to build it following the steps in this series. It will not be available for download nor will…
It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.