Morning Coffee 150
- Yesterday was the NHL trading deadline, and the Capitals were very
busy. They obtained Huet from
Montreal,
Federov from
Columbus
and Cooke from
Vancouver.
Given they are fighting just to make the playoffs, going for three
soon-to-be unrestricted free agents seems like an odd choice.
However, the consensus (among my parents anyway) was that it’s
critical to get this very young Caps team some playoff experience.
Even if all three walk at season’s end, it’ll be worth if the Caps
make a playoff run. Besides it’s not like we gave up much: an extra
second round pick in ’09, a 19 year old defensive
prospect
(who was apparently 14th on the depth chart) and an
underachieving
winger.
- Speaking of the Caps playoff chances, they are currently one and a
half games back of the division leading Hurricanes and two games
behind the current eighth seed Flyers. Yes, I rank hockey teams
using baseball’s standings system. Otherwise, you have to talk about
games in hand (i.e. the Caps are five points behind Carolina with
two games in hand).
- The writer’s guild ratified the new
contract,
so Hollywood labor strife is now officially behind us. At least
until July when the the actors may go on strike.
- It seems like a slow week for Microsoft geek news, which is odd
since WS08, VS08 and SQL08 all launch
today. I’m
guessing it’s the calm before the Mix
storm next week.
- After going
dark
for six months, Linq to
XSD
has been re-released to work with the RTM version of VS08. Scott
Hanselman
demonstrates
Linq to XSD by applying it to OFX, an XML
Schema he calls “goofy” but apparently helped develop. OFX uses
derivation by
restriction,
which has no direct corollary in C#, but Linq to XSD’s is able to
translate between XML and objects without loosing any of that type
fidelity. Nice to know Linq to XSD can tolerate OFX’s level of
goofiness, though I’m guessing most people use much more
straightforward schemas.
- Speaking of Linq, I discovered LINQPad
via a comment on Rob Conery’s
blog
(which I found via
DNK).
It’s basically a code snippet IDE for C# 3.0 and VB9, with it also
has built in database connection support, so it can fulfil much the
same role as SQL Management Studio. I only played with it for a few
minutes, but I was really impressed. This is definitely going in my
utilities folder. I wonder if they’re interested in supporting F#?
- Not sure how I missed this, but you can get MSDN
Magazine via
same Syndicated Client Experience as Architecture
Journal.
Unlike AJ which is divided into issues, the MSDN magazine client is
divided into topics which is harder to square with the physical
magazine. On the other hand, since MSDN Mag has been around longer,
perhaps topics + search is a better discovery mechanism.
- Soma
announces
the Visual Studio Gallery, a
repository of VS Extensions. It’s kinda cool, but the whole
discovery mechanism is clunky. I might like to experiment with some
free or even free trial products, but there’s no way to filter on
cost so finding them is a hassle. Also, there’s no way for community
members to vote, rate or comment on the products in any way.
- Nick Malik can’t answer the
question
“how does Enterprise Architecture demonstrate value?” I could be
snarky and say “it doesn’t”, but that’s only half the answer. It
doesn’t, but it should. My opinion, since you asked Nick, is that EA
fails to deliver value because it tries to control the
uncontrollable. Trying to gain efficiency thru establishing
standards and eliminating overlap via reuse are pipe dreams, though
literally millions of $$$ have been poured into those sink-holes.
There are a few areas where centrally funded infrastructure projects
can solve big problems that individual projects can’t effectively
tackle on their own. EA should focus their time there, they can
actually make a difference. Otherwise, they should stay out of
project’s way.
Posted by devhawk.net on February 27, 2008. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged Entertainment, Hockey, LINQ, Microsoft, Visual Studio, Washington Capitals & XML.
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2 Comments
ilanchelian · February 28, 2008
Nick Malik · February 29, 2008