Morning Coffee 122
- Sorry for the posting lag. Had a few technical difficulties around
here. In the process of moving hosts, so expect more glitches.
- My talk at the p&p Summit on Monday went really well. At least, it
felt good and the applause at the end felt genuine. I recorded the
audio on my laptop, so I’ll be posting a Silverlight version as soon
as I figure out how to adjust the levels so their somewhat
consistent.
Paraesthesia
and
#2872
have reactions.
- Speaking of the p&p Summit, Scott Hanselman posted his ASP.NET MVC
demo from his talk. Said ASP.NET MVC bits aren’t available yet, so
you can’t, you know, run the demo for yourself. But at least you can
review what the ASP.NET MVC code will look like.
- I stopped by the SOA/BPM conference last week and saw
Jon,
Sam and
Jesus among others. Spent quite a
bit of time talking to Sam and his Neudesic colleagues about this
“physically distributed/logically centralized” approach that I
think is
hogwash.
It sounds to me like Neudesic approach is really federated not
centralized, though I’m not sure David
Pallmann would
agree. Federated makes much more sense to me than centralized.
- Nick Malik continues his
series
on SOA Business Operations Model. I especially like his point that
this isn’t a series of choices, you need to “look at your
company and try to understand which model the business has
selected.”
- The first CTP of PowerShell
2.0
is out! Check out what’s
new
on the PowerShell team blog and Jeffrey Snover’s TechEd
Presentation.
(via Sam
Gentile)
- Soma announced updates to VC++ coming next
year,
including TR1
support and a
“major” MFC
upgrade
to support creating native apps that look like Office, IE or VS. I
get supporting TR1, but the idea that people are
clamoring
for MFC updates is kinda surprising. Many years ago when I first
came to MSFT, a friend asked “But don’t you hate Microsoft?” to
which I responded “No, I just hate MFC”. Obviously, not everyone
agrees with that sentiment.
- Steve Vinoski thinks there’s no hope for
IT.
Funny, I keep agreeing with Steve’s overall point but disagreeing
with his reasoning. I still don’t buy the serendipity
argument.
I like compiled languages. And I think he’s overstating the amount
of “real, useful guidance” for REST floating around. Basically,
there’s “the book“.
- In widely reported news, Windows Live launched their next generation
services. Don’t bother with the press
release,
just go to the new WL home page.
- Speaking of WL, Dare Obasanjo points
to
the Live Data Interactive SDK
page where you can experiment
with the WL Contacts REST API. It gives you a good sense of how the
Web3S protocol works.
Pretty well, IMO. However, how come WL Contacts
Schema
doesn’t include some type of update timestamp for sync purposes? If
you wanted to build say a Outlook to WL Contacts sync engine,
you’d have to download the entire address book and grovel thru it
for changes every sync.
- Speaking of Web3S, I’d love to see some info on how one might
implement a service using Web3S. Yaron Goland
positions Web3S as an
alternative to
APP
that WL developed because they “couldn’t make APP work in any sane
way for our scenarios”. I’m sure other folks have similar scenarios.
Posted by devhawk.net on November 9, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged ASP.NET, C++, PowerShell, REST, SOA & Windows Live.
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