How often do you have to set up IIS on a remote server and configure it to be accessible from a client box using Visual Studio.NET? Daily? No. Monthly? No. Maybe once every year or two? More like it. I just want to kick myself when I have to go through all of the same problem solving! Oh yeah, forgot to install remote debugging. Oh yeah, forgot to include myself as a VSDebugger group member. The most interesting one this time was getting my webserver to show up in the windows explorer on my client box. I think I am almost back to programming now!
Monthly Archives: January 2004
book writing
Joel Semeniuk asked me why I haven’t written a book and have turned down offers to do so. My joke answer was that I’m too busy with my user group and INETA (he also runs a user group and is on my INETA committee). I pointed Joel to Chris Anderson’s post which perfectly answers this question.
Another new RD – Guy Barrette from Montreal
Hey look at that. Guy Barrette who runs the .net user group in Montreal just emailed to let me know that he has become an RD. This is great news. Montreal has been without an RD for a while. Guy and I do a lot of user group stuff together since we are only 2 hours apart so we try to share resources. He also helps out on the user group relations committee that I chair for INETA. He works with the user groups in Quebec.
Guy and I got together to bring Steven Smith from ASPAlliance on a little cross-border tour. He will be here in Vermont in a few weeks to play a little and speak at VErmont.NET and then drive up to Montreal to speak at Guy’s user group. His Montreal gig is an INETA sponsored event. His trip to Vermont is a “Julie bribed me…“ production.
More on that though later…
Rich Strahl’s weblog
I love reading Rick’s blog. He’s a really smart and innovative guy who has been working with .net for a long time. He is writing applications and also experimenting and his weblog talks about some of the hurdles he runs into while trying to write software and how he gets around them. Very practical, very engaging and educational. Rick lives in Hawaii. I’m always waiting for some surfing pictures! I have fun emailing him once in a while to tell him the temperature – like when it’s 20 below (F). It’s pretty funny going to a conference and hanging out with Rick from Hawaii and Don Kiely from Alaska.
ooh – another one! Farhan Muhammed – new Regional Director
Farhan – way to GO! Farhan is one of the INETA board members, an author, etc. See more here!
John Bristowe is an MSDN Regional Director
Hip hip hooray. This is my friend who gives me CRAP when I write about him in my blog if for example, he’s doing a presentation at a conference. Hey, somebody’s gott brag about you, John.
nah nah nah nah
Big fat congratulations, buddy!
Whidbey BCL the Easy Way #2: Shifting how we look at the Base Class Library on the road to Avalon
Here is another point that I will be making in my Whidbey BCL talk.
Most people have seen this Base Class Library diagram many times. Here’s a picture you have seen a thousand times before where the namespaces are organized hierarchically. There seems to be an attempt to stack them as though they were building blocks, with the fundamentals on the bottom and the UI stuff at the top.

If you look at the WinFX namespace diagram (to which Whidbey is an evolutionary step) you can see that the classes are now grouped not by namespace, but by functionality. I don’t recall seeing the classes organized like this before I went to the PDC, though I could be wrong.
Thanks to the Chilean MVP website, I was able to find some jpgs of this poster that I have on my wall. Here is a small one , click on it to get a HUGE one that you can actually read (warning the big one is almost 1MB)
What you will see is, for example, pieces of System.Web in the “presentation” bucket, in the “Data” bucket in the “Communication” bucket and even in the “Fundamentals” bucket.
Though of course, it will always be important to understand the hierarchy of the classes, this shift in perception will make a developer’s evolution to Avalon easier.
DevDays and DevDays Bloggers

Though I wrote about DevDays 2004 eons ago (and that attendees will be getting Whidbey!!), since I am speaking at two events (Hartford 3/2 and Boston 3/16) I just signed up for the devdaysbloggers.net site. Here is my little “I’ll be there” graphic. It doesn’t really give me the same jitters as going to PDC, but it’s a very important event, because it will reach a lot of developers that would never get to a TechEd or PDC.
ooh – I think I got a secret code message!
I received an “order confirmation from Amazon” email and of course, I hadn’t ordered anything. Out of curiousity I looked at the source of the email. It is filled with tags that I don’t feel like deciphering or examing, but it looks like it’s some secret message or something! If you are curious, I have uploaded a screen shot of the source, rather than paste the text in here and give them some google juice!
This is just a splice. Click on the message to view the whole jpg.
hahahahahaha (a SQL Server Joke)
Just because I have had one or ten roadblocks every step of the way of rebuilding my server, I thought that this was very funny (thank goodness my sense of humor has returned after a good nights’ sleep!)
When trying to install SQL Server 2000 Ent from my 12/03 MSDN Universal CD on to a Windows 2003 server with all updates applied:
“SQL Server 2000 SP2 is not supported by this version of windows”
hahahahahahahaha
Of course I’m not the first person to see this, but it was a little suprising and the solution is really just to ignore the message as I see in the many posts that google showed me.

