Examples & How-To 
How To: Use URL Rewriting in ASP.NET(6)
URL rewriting is the practice publishing a cleaner URL for your ASP.NET pages. There are many reasons you might want to do this, including search engine optimization and human readability. Search engines actively try to ascertain information about the contents of a page based on the URL, and providing common keywords in it will increase your page ranking. This article will show you how to use URL rewriting to hide your ugly URL while retaining the power and structure of your existing ASP.NET application by using URL rewriting.
Fading Images Together using C#
In this article, I show how to "fade" or "blend" together two images using C#. We use the System.Drawing package (mostly the Bitmap class) to extract the individual pixels of two images, and then perform a weighted average to construct a new image. The whole thing is wrapped up in a Windows Forms project. Source code and a Windows binary are provided.
Getting Started with ASP.NET (Part 3): Postbacks and Debugging
This three-part series is concluded with a lesson on advanced events. You'll construct a sample Employee Management application, and I'll throw a couple of tricks at you to teach you some lessons about real-life ASP.NET programming. We'll learn about postbacks and use the built-in Visual Studio debugger to solve the problems we run into. This article will complete your initial ASP.NET skillset and ready you to begin your own application development.
Getting Started with ASP.NET (Part 2): Code-behind and Events
Building upon the "Hello World" application created in the previous article, C# code is written into the backing code files to add functionality. The concept of events is explained and demonstrated through an example application that allows the user to interact with various controls on the page. This article is second in a three-part series aimed at helping new ASP.NET developers create real, live web applications with no perquisite knowledge.
