Morning Coffee 156
- My hockey team won last night 4-2. No points for me, but I was even
on the night. I did spend some time in the penalty box, but I was
serving a two many men on the ice bench minor. We only had nine
skaters, not enough for two full lines, so I’m pretty tired today.
However, I’m not as tired as I was two weeks ago – that’s a good
sign.
- Politics 2.0 watch: The Obama campain announced
yesterday
that they raised $55 million in donations in the month of February.
That’s significantly more than Clinton ($35
million)
and McCain ($12
million)
combined. Even more impressive is that $45 million of that was
raised online, of which $40 million were from donations of $100 or
less and $22.5 million were from donations of $25 or less. I guess
in Politics 2.0, individuals contribute more than online
punditry
and video parodies of
political commercials.
- TextGlow is a Sivlerlight 2 based Word
docx file viewer, created
by
James Newton-King. Nice, but what I really want is “SlideGlow”, a
SL2 based PPTX file viewer. (via
DNK)
- Speaking of Silverlight, Windows Live launched an experimental site
called PhotoZoom which will let
you create DeepZoom photo albums. (via
LiveSide)
- Charlie Calvert has
created
a home for Language Futures
discussion on MSDN
Code Gallery. If you’ll recall, back in January he asked for input
on Dynamic
Lookup.
Now he’s looking for feedback on Call
Hierarchy,
a proposed VS IDE feature to help you visualize how your code flows.
Great idea, but the Call Hierarchy dialog
mockup
isn’t very intuitive. Couldn’t we put these visualizations into the
code editor window directly, like
CodeRush
does?
- John Lam continues his Dynamic Silverlight series, first building a
Flickr image browser in Managed
JScript then
showing how to integrate an IronRuby version of the Flickr image
browser with an ASP.NET MVC
app.
- EdJez is
inspiring.
Subscribed. (via Brad
Wilson)
Posted by devhawk.net on March 7, 2008. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged Dynamic Languages, Hockey, Lanugages, Silverlight & Visual Studio.
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