Morning Coffee 31
- Architect MVP business news keeps on coming. Today it’s Corillian –
the company Scott Hansleman works for – getting acquired by
CheckFree.
- Los Angeles is looking to provide city-wide low-cost (maybe free)
wireless
access.
My father has often suggested that Internet access be treated like
other utilities like water and power. Sounds like LA is heading down
that path. I wonder if they’re looking at WiMAX?
- The .NET Micro
Framework
– which powers the SPOT watch – now has an
SDK. For those keeping track, that makes three embedded solution
platforms from Microsoft, the Micro FX, Windows
CE (which
also just shipped a new
version)
and Windows XP
Embedded. (via
Larkware)
- BEA’s Bruce Graham talks somewhat
obtusely
on a topic I am particularly passionate about: putting more power in
business people’s hands to build their own systems. (via Joe
McKendrick)
- Register for the Windows Home Server
beta. Also check
out the
forums,
team blog and
SuperSite
Preview. Looks
pretty sweet (via Scott
Hansleman)
- The final version of Live Search for
Mobile was released a few
days ago. This program rocks. I’m using the Windows Mobile version,
but there’s also J2ME version as well. (via Dare
Obasanjo)
- Any lingering interest I had in Ruby vanished yesterday as got to
chapter 8 of Windows Powershell in
Action. Chapter 8 is called
“ScriptBlocks and Objects” and it is specifically about
meta-programming. After reading that chapter, PS seems more
flexible in this space than Ruby, which is the current industry
darling for metaprogramming. For example, in Ruby you can optionally
pass a block of code to any method. In PS, you can define a
ScriptBlock like any other parameter. That means you can tell from
the method signature that the ScriptBlock is used. Or you can define
a function that takes multiple ScriptBlock parameters. Much more
thought on this is needed.
Posted by devhawk.net on February 14, 2007. Filed under Development and Morning Coffee. Tagged Embedded & PowerShell.
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