Morning Coffee 97
- For the first six months of 2007, I posted 158 times in 181 days.
I’m obviously off the pace I set in January of averaging a post a
day, but I am
averaging just under nine tenth of a post per day. Not bad. At this
rate, I’ll post almost as much this year as I did the last two years
combined.
- It was a great family weekend. Saturday, three of my friends helped
me move an upright piano that we got used for a great price.
Luckily, one of said friends is also a physics teacher, otherwise I
don’t think we could have gotten that heavy thing in the truck. To
say thanks, we BBQed for them Saturday evening. Then yesterday we
took the kids to see a Sesame Street
Live show. Both
days were beautiful, which my wife greatly
appreciated.
- The Caps hit the free agent market running yesterday, picking up
Tom
Poti
(four years, $14 million) and Victor
Kozlov
(two years, $5 million). They weren’t the A-list free agents, but
they both seem like solid pickups. According to Japer’s Rink, the
Caps were about $6.5
million
under the new cap
minimum. These two
signings just about close that gap, but it doesn’t
sound
like they’re done. That’s good news for Caps fans.
- Scott Guthrie continues his
series
on LINQ to SQL. While I’ve seen most of this before, the cool thing
Scott shows is hovering over the LINQ to SQL result and bringing up
the exact SQL statement in a debugger window. That’s pretty cool.
- Nick Malik is now “Mr.
SOA”
inside MSIT. As you might imagine, I’ll be working with him fairly
closely. Actually, he’s late to a meeting with me as I type this.
- John Shewchuk announces a new
version
of BizTalk Services coming soon. The big new feature is access
control for services exposed via the BizTalk Services. If you can’t
wait, you can try out the new stuff in their pre-production
environment right now, before it’s
live. Is this a beta of a beta?
- Soma announces the MSDN Small Business Developer
Center. I took a quick
look thru the site. Strangely enough, it doesn’t cover
Dynamics – Microsoft’s business
software primarily targeting small and medium size businesses.
- Ted Neward called object/relational mapping the “Vietnam of
Computer
Science“.
David Chappell gives us our next war / technology analogy, declaring
that the REST vs. WS-* war is over, ending in a truce like the
Korean war rather than “crushing victory for one side”.
- Like Jeff Atwood, I didn’t realize About Face has been updated,
twice. I am a huge fan of the first edition, but Jeff calls About
Face 3 “the
best edition of this classic yet”. I just ordered a copy for myself.
- David McGhee transcribed a fantastic session with Dr. Don
Ferguson
at the Australian Architecture
Forum on
SOA/ESB integration in the real world. Go read the whole thing. Udi
Dahan pulls out the
quote
“there is no such thing as a centralized ESB.” Amen to that. My
other favorite quotes from this discussion is “The temptation is
often to get everything in a repository, but often you cannot rely
on people to put everything in the registry” and “there is sometimes
the “Highlander” philosophy of there can be only one service”. If
you’re design depends on centralization and/or significant change in
human behavior, it’s doomed from the start. Frankly, it’s amazing
how often that happens.
- In response to my What is the Rails Question
post,
Hartmut Wilms wonders
why
“the .NET community (for the most part) ignores Open Source
Projects”. I wonder the same thing, though I don’t think you can
lump the whole .NET community together on this. While some parts of
the community ignore anything they can’t download from MSDN, other
parts strongly embrace open source projects.
Posted by devhawk.net on July 2, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged Blogging, Community, Family, SOA & Washington Capitals.
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4 Comments
Andreas Öhlund · July 3, 2007
devhawk.net · July 4, 2007
John Gibson · July 4, 2007
Nick Malik · July 18, 2007