Morning Coffee 148
- As I predicted yesterday, Microsoft
announced
that “For the first time, community games will be distributed
through Xbox Live.” I haven’t seen a press release yet, but it looks
like this will allow any XNA developer to publish on XBL. Joystiq
has a few
details.
According to Major
Nelson, six
community games will be available on XBL later today. Also, it looks
like you’ll be able to make XNA games for your Zune as
well. Details to
follow.
- Speaking of yesterday, I
referred to
President Bush as “President 30% Approval”. This was incorrect. From
now on, I’ll refer to him as “President 19%
Approval“.
- Speaking of politics, two more big wins for
Obama yesterday. The Clinton
camp, looking more desperate every day, unveiled a new
website purporting to provide the
“facts and myths about the race for delegates”. Memo to HRC:
“Florida and Michigan should count” isn’t a fact, it’s an opinion. I
can’t see how this site helps her cause.
- Joel on Software, who used to work on the Excel team, provides a
facinating
look into why
the Office File Formats are so complicated. Nothing more to add, I
just thought it was an interesting discussion of “real-world”
complications to something that seems like it should be simpler.
- Scott Guthrie provides a client product post .NET 3.5
roadmap,
much like he did for web
products
a few months ago. Unlike the web roadmap, which includes exciting
stuff like Silverlight 2.0, IIS 7.0 and ASP.NET Extensions
(including MVC), the client roadmap includes: better setup, better
perf for WPF, better memory utilization and startup time, WPF
designer improvements, and some new WPF control. Color me under
whelmed.
- My old team recently launched the Software + Services Architecture
Center.
S+S guru Gianpaolo Carraro recently
wrote
about the different perspectives this new site is trying cater to.
S+S hasn’t been on my personal radar, but it’s something I really
would like to dig more into.
- In a recent charity hockey
game,
Team Cure beat Team Hope 2,250 to 2,223. No, that’s not a typo. The
two teams of twenty faced off for 240 straight hours of hockey in
sub-zero weather to raise $300,000 for cancer research. That’s
frakking dedication to a cause.
Posted by devhawk.net on February 20, 2008. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged .NET Framework, Hockey, Office, Software + Services & XNA.
← Back to blog