Morning Coffee 100
- The big 100. This puts be 1083
posts behind
Iron Link Poster Mike Gunderloy. As his .NET skills
deteriorate, maybe I
can catch up…but I doubt it. I’m only 77
posts
behind Sam Gentile, so maybe that’s a bit more feasible.
- The ADO.NET Team blog
announces
the new Entity Framework CTP. Looks like there’s also a new .NET
Framework 3.5
CTP
and new Visual Web Developer “Orcas” Express
CTP
as well. (via Sam
Gentile)
- Speaking of
“Orcas” VS 2008, it
launches
with Windows Server 2008 and SQL Server 2008 next February. (via
DNK)
- Scott Guthrie continues is LINQ to SQL series. This
time,
using LINQ to SQL to update the database.
- My friend Arvidra Semhi recently moved and
rebooted
his blog. Among his many accomplishments, Arvindra
started
the Architecture Journal.
I’m particularly interested in his recent Service
Capsule
work. Subscribed.
- Last night was the Microsoft E3 Briefing. Gamerscore blog has the
news
rundown.
Didn’t seem to be any HUGE news. Last year’s E3 was the first Halo 3
showing and X06 featured the Halo Wars announcement. Nothing that
earth-shaking this time, though the XBLM keeps on rolling, now
featuring Disney
movies.
(Major Nelson has a
list.)
I’m thinking that the whole HD-DVD vs. BluRay war is going to be
eclipsed by direct download before it’s over, though I’m still
waiting for PC support & all-you-can-eat pricing.
- Politics 2.0 Watch: Clay Shirky has a great blog
post
on modern-day Luddites. As he points out: “A Luddite argument is one
in which some broadly useful technology is opposed on the grounds
that it will discomfort the people who benefit from the inefficiency
the technology destroys.” How much inefficiency is there in our
modern political system? And more importantly, who benefits from
that inefficiency? We’ve already seen the dramatic effects blogs can
have on political news, media and reporting. What happens when
users citizens are no longer satisfied just writing about the
political process and want to get their hands dirty in the
policy-making process itself?
Posted by devhawk.net on July 11, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee and Politics. Tagged ADO.NET, Blogging, Visual Studio & Xbox 360.
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