Daily Archives: June 15, 2004

Michele is a content machine!

In the last month, not only has Michele started a weblog , been part of the team that started the Interop Warriors blog, coordinated the Web Services Interop Day, and presented at TechEd, but she also has put out an notable amount of very high quality content:

Here are some of them that I have seen:

WSE2 Security WebCast

ASP.NET Scalability article on MSDN Online

WSE2 Article in Code Magazine

Sending Text or HTML via Socket Commands in ASPNetPro Magazine (June 2004)

She is definitely one of those people who constantly amazes me.

 

My field of Lupine

Rather than a big lawn to mow, we have about 1.5 acres in front of our house that is a field with wild flowers. It’s history is that it was a big field with an old house down closer to the road. Ten years ago that house was removed and what is now our house was built further back. The original owners wanted “lawn, lots a lawn”, so they let people from all over town come dig up the wildflowers to transplant

at their homes and they turned the beautiful field into a lawn. Much to the chagrin of the neighbors, the owner mowed about 4 times a week. He loved his lawn. Then he sold his house to the next owners about 5 years ago. The first thing they did was dig up  a swath of about 10 feet perimeter around this area and seed it with wildflower seeds from the Vermont WildFlower Farm . So right now the lupine are at their peak and the Sweet William (dianthus) and early phlox and flax as well are all over. It is phenomenal. I tried to take pictures but it just doesn’t capture what is really there. So I walked around the path with my little digital camera on video and made a few videos. They might make you sea sick as I’m walking around and it’s not very still. And it still isn’t really very good but the best I can do. too bad the previous owners didn’t do one – he is an emmy award winning filmmaker for National Geographic. Or maybe I can get Eric King to come and do it? Heh.

And turn off the sound – it’s just the wind hitting the camera. These got saved as QuickTime videos – I have no control over that.

The first one is (egads) 17MB and lasts about 3 or 4 minutes. The second is the tail end — about 2.2 MB. Also they don’t seem to stream very well. I think it downloads the whole thing first. No way my folks can see them on their 56K dialup!

WTF is going on?

I’m sorry but I actually wrote and did not post a similar paragraph last week after seeing yet another horror story in the news – a woman and her grandmother being murdered and dismembered by her former boyfriend and then a man in NYS lining up his 4 kids with the intention of killing them all. Now today a story of another murder and beheading in Hollywood. I have never seen news like this in all of my life. Well, over the years a few. But recently there have been more than a few. Is it truly a daily event but has been covered up until now?

New things we can learn from Steve Smith when he returns to the conference scene

As many of you may know from experience, Steve is a great presenter and an incredible source of knowledge on ASP.NET.

So now that he is learning things like this:

The training today was on mines, including how to detect them, how they’re employed, and how to react if you find yourself in a minefield.  The instruction was good, and next week we are scheduled to hook back up with the same EOBC class to go through some boobytrap classes, which will be the remainder of our training here.  Unfortunately, two things I was hoping to get in, demolition training and US weapons (heavy stuff) training probably isn’t going to happen at this point.

I look forward to the analogies he may pepper his presentations with. If you have ever sat in on one of Patrick Hynds talks on security, you will understand! Patrick’s military background shines through when he is talking about internet/network security – because as we all know, it’s a war!

I have to point out a funny trend here. Brian Johnson, who is the content strategist of the MSDN Developer Security Center also has a military background. Hmmm… maybe Steve, too, will be drawn more to security when he gets back!!