Hi everyone. This is a bit more of an unorthodox question, but I want to verify that I am doing this properly.
I am a very avid user of the Purdue OWL, but I'm having a little bit of trouble understanding this particular situation. I'm writing a paper on the history of C#/.NET, and I found some information that I would like to use here:
However, I'm conflicted on the way that I should cite it.
- If I attempt to cite this as an interview, I have issues with appropriately citing the date, as it needs to have a full date in Month Day, Year format according to APA standards.
- In addition to this, the two websites listed at the very beginning of the article are considerably out of date and lead me nowhere to finding the most authentic/original source. Looking at the source of the webpage, the title of the page is indicated as "CODE Magazine - Article: Heard on .NET Rocks: Jay Roxe", but the original source is obviously not from CODE Magazine, looking here:
Is there any possible way for me to locate the original title? If not, what can I do about the lack of a date for interview citation, since it technically was an interview prior to posting? My professor is a very big stickler and it would not surprise me to see a large penalty incurred from a citation mistake like this.
I am a very avid user of the Purdue OWL, but I'm having a little bit of trouble understanding this particular situation. I'm writing a paper on the history of C#/.NET, and I found some information that I would like to use here:
However, I'm conflicted on the way that I should cite it.
- If I attempt to cite this as an interview, I have issues with appropriately citing the date, as it needs to have a full date in Month Day, Year format according to APA standards.
- In addition to this, the two websites listed at the very beginning of the article are considerably out of date and lead me nowhere to finding the most authentic/original source. Looking at the source of the webpage, the title of the page is indicated as "CODE Magazine - Article: Heard on .NET Rocks: Jay Roxe", but the original source is obviously not from CODE Magazine, looking here:
I am the host of .NET Rocks!, an Internet audio talk show for .NET developers online at www.franklins.net/dotnetrocks and msdn.microsoft.com/dotnetrocks.





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