Morning Coffee 16
- Forgot to say this yesterday, but I’m happy the Colts are in the
Super Bowl. Well, I guess I’m more happy that New England isn’t in
it. They’ve won it enough lately. I wish the Saints has made it, but
at least this way I have no question who to root for on Super Bowl
Sunday.
- My Gamerscore cracked
1000 over the
weekend. I got 60 points in Dead
Rising
and 100 points in NHL
07k0%01%02).
I have played ten games + three arcade games for a maximum possible
Gamerscore of 10,600 and a Gamerscore “conversion rate” of 10.28%. I
wonder how good that is? All the leader boards I’ve seen rate purely
on Gamerscore.
- Speaking of games, Obsidian (of
Neverwind Nights fame) is working on an Aliens
RPG! Check out
this
post
by Chris Avellone of Obsidian on Game Design Research (via Game
Tycoon).
- Richard Grimes’.NET
Instrumentation
Workshop
rocks. Richard also has extensive workshops on .NET
Security
and .NET
Fusion (aka
runtime binding). If they’re as good as the instrumentation
workshop, they’re worth a read.
- In my SSB/WF prototypes, I’ve simply been writing to the console.
The lo-tech brute force works okay for a console app, but not at all
when I move my code into a shared library. So I decided to bite the
bullet now and translate the Console.WriteLine calls into
TraceSource calls. My prototype isn’t that big (yet), but it went
pretty smooth nonetheless. I currently have three TraceSources in my
solution – one for the host, one for my SSB activities & workflow
service and one for the persistence engine (I just inherited
from SqlWorkflowPersistenceService and added the trace calls). I’m
sure in time, I’ll wish I had set up my TraceSources differently,
but for now it works.
- The one feature I lost moving from Console.WriteLine to TraceSources
was color support. Since I am creating voluminous tracing data, I
used color coding to indicate which part of the application the
trace information was coming from. Of course, the OOB
ConsoleTraceListener doesn’t have any mechanism to color code the
output. I hacked up a ColorConsoleTraceListener in a couple of
minutes that worked great. I say “hacked” because my color choosing
code is currently hard coded, rather than being stored the config
file. If I get the time to change that, I’ll post the code here.
- While researching ASP.NET’s Membership system, I found this Scott
Guthrie
post
with links to ASP.NET providers for
MySql,
Oracle and
SQLite. I’ve
wondered about the lack of a simple file-based ASP.NET
role/membership provider and even started hacking together an XML
based one. But the availability of a .NET SQLite data
provider makes that an interesting
option. XML would be human readable, but porting the existing SQL
providers
to SQLite would probably be easier.
- Politics 2.0 in action: Talking Points
Memo is enouraging you (aka
Time Magazine’s Person of the
Year)
to record your own
response to
tonight’s State of the Union. Basically record your response via
camcorder, webcam or cellphone. Then upload it to YouTube and add it
to the TPM SOTU group. With
President Bush’s approval rating at all time
lows,
I’m guessing these videos will be venting some of the pent up
hostility towards this administration.
Posted by devhawk.net on January 23, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee and Politics. Tagged ASP.NET, Instrumentation & Xbox 360.
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2 Comments
Tim Marman · January 23, 2007
Rich McCollister · January 23, 2007