Mark Miller, from Developer Express, was clearly the “belle of the ball” (well, the beaux of the ball) at TechEd showing off their phenomenal product, CodeRush. This was viral. I knew it was cool when I saw Scott Hansleman hunkered down with Mark and his laptop for about 2 hours at the cabanas. In fact I was chatting with someone who had something to talk with Scott about and said “he is way too seriously involved with Mark right now, I’d recommend waiting…“ Just google “CodeRush weblog” and you will see how many people were writing about it. I spent some time with Mark as well and saw it work it’s magic in C# and it is amazing. I think C# needs it a lot more than VB does (think: “where is that damned end bracket?:….right?) and will check out what it does in VB as well. CodeRush has been a must have tool in the Delphi world for a long time. It will surely make the same dive in to the .NET world now.
Monthly Archives: May 2004
TechEd Hindsight: Day 1 Monday
I better start getting this down before my 40+ year old brain starts losing this stuff!
KEYNOTE
Day 1 began with Ballmer’s Keynote (details of which you can read in many many blogs) and the highlight of which was the very nice surprise of Rebecca Dias entering the stage to do the demos. Rebecca, who like many PMs at Microsoft, has a very technical background that most people don’t realize. This is Rebecca’s official title: “ Advanced Web Services Product Manager, Microsoft Corporation“. Many PMs are incorrectly viewed as marketing people and that is just so far from the truth. Here is a page from Brian Gold’s blog that has the definition of this job, if you are curious. Unfortunately Rebecca, surely in a moment of nervousness (on stage with Steve Ballmer in front of maybe 10,000 people) made a silly self-deprecating remark (if you knew her, you would have understood that’s all she was saying) that had a different meaning to a lot of people. Ballmer quickly covered it up and they moved on.
Rebecca’s demo (featuring IBF for Office and integration framework) was great and she got to be the person to announce VS2005 Team System as well as the public release finally of the WSE2 bits. I have played with the alpha a little over the last few months and was so impressed with it’s accessibility for non-plumbers, that I will be doing a talk called “Web Services Security for Dummies using WSE2” at DevConnections. (It was actually on the short list for TechEd but there are so many who are much more knowledgable about this topic that it would have been just silly to have me do it…)
SESSION
After the keynote was Don Box & Doug Purdy doing the first Connected Systems talk to a packed room. Poor Don was sick, bundled up in a very cozy looking sweater. I have never seen the Don & Doug show though I have seen the Don & Chris show a number of times. Doug is another fantastic stage presence. As you have probably read, they took a lot of audience questions in advance and made sure that their talk, which panned out from the central them of “there is only one program and it is still being written”, answered the questions.
Because of my experience with WSE2, I wanted to hear their thoughts on WSE2 for non-plumbers and asked “do you still have to be a plumber to work with WSE?”. Don’s answer was, as I have experienced, you do not have to be a plumber to WRITE WSE code, but at this point, if you have problems, you will need a plumber to solve them. Fair enough. That still gets us pretty far. And there are lots of plumbers around to help us out, too.
Michele L.B. has one of the best summaries of this session that I have seen so far.
HANGING
The rest of the day is a blur…a lunch meeting with Chris Pels and Eric King to talk about INETA stuff (which I was terribly unfocused since so many people came up to chat during that time – sorry Chris & Eric), wandering around the expo a bit though mostly hanging by the spot where Tablet PC, INETA, Mobile, SourceGear, Regional Director and VS Dev Tools booths merged. And I finally made my way to the cabanas and found the spot that became my homing place all week, by the RD cabana area.
SOCIAL TIME
At the end of the day, Christa Carpentiere (PM & content strategist for the Data Access & Storage dev Center), Sara Williams (head chick of MSDN) & I went over to the outdoor bar at the Marriott to hang out. A little later we were joined by a gaggle of MSDNers – Duncan Mackenzie, Brian Johnson (owns the Security dev Center), Matt Powell (web services dev center) and Shawn Morrissey (who helps Sara with the reigns and also did a great presenation at the INETA User Group Leaders Summit on Sunday). Then we all went to dinner by the water with the military choppers cruising overhead once in a while, and after that back to my hotel where there was a party on the rooftop “beach bar” that I wandered up to. Becky, who was wearing the #1 best shirt from the whole PDC, that was from the WSE release and said on it “I’M SECURE!” saw me wobbling a bit when walking through the sand and yelled out “Lerman you are wasted!” Not quite… 🙂 Lots of folks up there and it was fun.
But I still hadn’t found Kate Gregory yet, who by the way, took lots of pics and was a good tech ed blogger so go check out her blog!
Streaming Video of INETA User Group Leader Summit at TechEd
Eric King* has become theh unofficial documenter of all things INETA. Besides being in the process of creating a DVD for INETA full of content which includes many interviews of INETA folks and speaker bureau members, he brought his cool video camera and fancy digital camera to the INETA meeting. Everyone who spoke had to wear two mikes, one for the speakers in the room and another for the video. He taped almost the entire meetings.
He is in the process now of transferring the video and it will soon be available on the INETA website.
Thanks Eric!
*Chatanooga .NET User Group Leader and INETA User Group RElations Strategic Committee Member
INETA Volunteer of the Year: Dave Noderer
Dave Noderer, who does SO SO SO much for INETA as a board member and a very active member of the user group relations strategic committee was recognized by INETA as the Volunteer of the Year at our Sunday meeting. I can’t begin to tell you how well-deserved this was.
Thanks for everything Dave.
Eric Sink on the Business of TechEd – from a vendor view point
Eric Sink has another wonderful addition to his ongoing MSDN column “The Business of Software”. This one is about being a vendor at a trade show – “My Tech Ed Diary“. The SourceGear booth was right by spot where the INETA booth, the Microsoft Tablet PC and the various Developer Tools booths were on the edge of the Microsoft area, so I saw him frequently and got to chat and visit with him a number of times.
Additionally, Eric has a post on his blog addressing a question that is in the forefront of many of our minds: how does the new source control part of the VS2005 Team development tool compare to and affect the future of SourceGear Vault? SourceGear has had a huge advantage in having a great product to compete with Microsoft’s own greatly flawed source control tool – Visual Source Safe. Eric addresses many questions head on and says that probably the biggest problem he will see from this new product is that reduces his chances of becoming a billionaire by age 40. (That was followed, of course, by a big grin…)
TechEd hindsight: Day 0 – INETA meeting
I was a bad blog girl all week. I just had a dizzying and fun time seeing so many friends and meeting so many new people and learning learning learning. (oh and a party or two…)
I thought I would just try to get my experience down on [paper?] though much of this will be redundant from many many other posts.
(Day – 1) I flew in Saturday. I arrived at the airport at 6:15 am (mind you, I am not a morning person…) to find that my flight was cancelled and I would be flying out at 1:30pm instead. This meant missing an important INETA meeting on Saturday afternoon that I was really looking forward to. I met up with Christian Nagel, (author, Austrian MSDN Regional Director, INETA Europe Director and wearer of many other hats as well) in the Dulles airport while we waited for our flight to San Diego. I got to see the 4 possible covers of his upcoming Addison-Wesley book on Enterprise Services and had an opportunity to vote on which cover I preferred. This new book is part of the awesome A-W .NET Development Series. Very impressed!
In S.D. we found Jas Sandhu while we were waiting for our bags and Jas and I headed up to La Jolla for Michele Leroux Bustamante’s party at her wonderful home and finally got to meet her hubby. I also met Richard Campbell in person for the first time there. what a great guy he is! Ted Neward had a car so we drove back to SD with him, almost by way of Los Angeles since the exit was really easy to miss. Ted exhibited a trait that we were all impressed with. He pulled off the highway and asked directions. Clemens Vasters was a exhausted from many hours of travel and [still blogless] Cathi Gero and I were teasing him that he was like one of those strangers on the NYC subways that doze off and end up with their head on your shoulder.
(Day 0 – INETA) Sunday was our all day INETA meeting. What fun it was to arrive and meet Joan Murray from Addison-Wesley after 2 years of communicating by email. There were so many people there and lots of new faces thanks to 20 “scholarship” invitees by D.E.s around the country. The meeting was all day. We had presentions by various INETA illuminati as well as a number of Microsoft folks. We learned how too work with sponsors, how to extend training within a user group, what Microsoft Developer Community Champions, Developer Evenglists and MSDN Regional Directors do and how to connect with them. We were presented with lots of information on how to work with resources at Microsoft. We also got to meet with many vendors (key to user group sponsorship and swag provision…). My own INETA committee, the User Group Relations committee, had an opportunity to do a little evangelizing to acquire some more liaisons. Since we are working with over 200 user groups in North America, we try to ensure that each user group leader has a personal relationship with someone at INETA and we continuously have to grow our committee in order to achieve that.
After the meeting, we migrated to a great cocktail party for INETA (surely, you’ve read about the tequila bottles by now) and I was also able to hook up with my Burlington pal, Ali Aghareza, who was very excited to be attending his very first conference.
After the cocktail party, Ali and a few others and I walked over to the convention center to register. By now it was about 9pm. On the way there, we bumped in to one person after another that was someone I am friends with and so happy to see, Stan Schultes, (frequent VSM author and founder of the .NET Pub Clubs – link is to Russ Fustino’s page but has info on the pub clubs), Don Kiely and a host of others.
Back at the W MSDN was instrumental in sponsorship of the INETA meeting and had provided a block of rooms at the W San Diego Hotel that were filled up by many people attending the meetings. The W is a very trendy hotel. It’s not the kind of place where you can go buy a candy bar late at night. It is just filled with bars. It is also the hottest new nightspot in San Diego. Lots of young women with low cut tight fitting shirts (it seems to be the main fashion trend in S.D.). Very trendy. I felt like a freakin’ school marm walking around there. Egads. But oh well. I finally went to bed at about 1:30 am (this is 4:30 my own time and I had gotten up at 5am that morning and of course did not sleep on the plane) and could still hear music from the bar way up on the 7th floor. Next time, I’m going to the old folks hotel. However, my room was beautiful and of course I love those fantastic Heavenly beds that are also in sister-hotel the Westin are, well, heavenly!
A Java Dev’s view of INETA, TechEd and the .NET Community
N. Alex Rupp was one of the many user group leaders invited to the INETA User Group Leader Summit on May 23rd. However, Alex is not a .NET User Group Leader but a Java developer who is very involved in the Java community. His weblog posts from the summit as well as his reaction to what he saw at TechEd are fascinating. I must admit, since I don’t know very much at all about the inner workings of EJB and all of the java techs, I did glaze over some of the deeper technical parts of the posts. But on a high level, comparing the communities, the tools and even the leaders (Ballmer’s keynote vs. McNealy’s at JavaOne) are very insightful.
Here are his posts from Day1, Day2, Day 3 and Day4. Thanks to Chris Pels for pointing out these posts.
teched post mortem – coming soon
I didn’t have a free moment at TechEd. I will write it all down soon…
Rob Howard gives up on a leak and tells us his big news
Rob’s last day with Microsoft was yesterday. He finally blogged about it. Earlier this week he said that he had actually been hoping the secret would get leaked and was impressed at how seriously people take a request to keep things mum.
Rob will certainly be as available and visible as ever and having a huge impact on our industry and our community. His first non-Microsoft public gig will be at DevTeach in Montreal June 19 – 22. I’ll be a speaker there as well so am looking forward to spending more time with so many of my pals and meeting lots of new developers.
Watch this space for Rob’s new company, Telligent Systems. THere will be at least one familiar face on board there as well. It should be a good match. Rob lives in Texas, so if you think “texas“ and someone who has recently announced a job change, that should be enough for you to figure out who.
Testing 1,2,…
I took advantage of the 1/2 price (for first 500…) cert tests taht Pearson/Vue was offering at TechEd and finally took some tests. Other than the recent .NET Security beta that I took I have never taken cert tests in my 20 years of programming. I took the Windows Forms VB.NET and Web Applications VB.NET tests. The first was the windows forms and I took it totally cold and just barely passed. There were many things on there that I have never happened to do or use before. Also, I found that my deployment and debugging skills were my weakest. I can definitely attest the fact that I have not done a lot with tracing and event logging and it showed. I know quite a lot about them, but just don’t have hands on experience. MeasureUp was offering one free practice test there also, so I spent about an hour with that in prep for the web app test. There were definitely some new things for me which I got into my head before taking the real test. They weren’t on the real test! Once again, the deployment and tracing stuff was my weakest suit but I passed that test with no problems. I didn’t think I had and was surprised by my score!