Monthly Archives: May 2006

Web Services/WCF WebCasts Series in June: I’ll be doing the WSE 3.0 Overview one

Kirk Allen Evans has organized some of the top WCF/Web Services gurus (and me,too!) to do a web cast series through June.

For those of you securing web services TODAY, my webcast will be Overview of WSE 3.0 . June 8th at 11am EST (that’s 8am PST).

More info here

Also oooh aah a raffle for attendees!! Attend any webcast in this series and qualify to win a 40 gigabyte Creative Zen MP3 player (official rules).

Here is the full of the schedule

“The Lifetime of a Message in Windows Communication Foundation”

Justin Smith, Wintellect

6/1/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299306&Culture=en-US

 “Taking Advantage of TCP/IP Reliability in SOAP”

William “Softwaremaker” Tay

6/6/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299329&Culture=en-US

 

 “Extending Windows Communication Foundation”

Aaron Skonnard, Pluralsight

6/7/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299313&Culture=en-US

 

“Introducing Web Services Enhancements for Microsoft .NET (WSE) 3.0”

Julie Lerman, The Data Farm

6/8/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299315&Culture=en-US

 

“What’s New for ASP.NET Web Services (ASMX) in .NET 2.0”

Kirk Allen Evans, Microsoft Corporation

6/13/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299322&Culture=en-US

 

“Dissecting Contract-First Web Services”

Christian Weyer, thinktecture

6/14/2006 8:00 AM PST

 http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299331&Culture=en-US 

 

   “Transactions in Distributed Solutions with Windows Communication Foundation”

Christian Weyer, thinktecture

6/15/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299342&Culture=en-US

 

“Building Powerful AJAX-Style Solutions with ASP.NET “Atlas” and Windows Communication Foundation”

Kirk Allen Evans, Microsoft Corporation

6/20/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299344&Culture=en-US

 

“Exposing Your Content as a Service Using Windows Communication Foundation’

Clemens Vasters, Microsoft Corporation

6/21/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299346&Culture=en-US

 

“Web Services Interoperability with Java and J2EE Using Windows Communication Foundation (“Indigo”)”

Kirill Gavrylyuk, Microsoft Corporation

6/22/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299348&Culture=en-US

 

“Understanding Windows Communication Foundation Contracts”

Michele Leroux Bustamante, IDesign

6/28/2006 8:00 AM PST

http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/eventdetail.aspx?eventID=1032299360&Culture=en-US

Late Spring Hiking in the Green Mountains

Rich and I actually went out for a short hike yesterday. We can just go out the back door and through the woods to get to a trail called the Beane Trail that is an access trail to the Long Trail. Our plan was just to take a walk up to the shelter at the end of the Beane trail which is just a few hundred feet shy of the LT. We don’t generlly hike in the spring (too wet & muddy) or in the summer (too hot & buggy), but this was, well,right in between. It was a nice day. The trail going up the mountain wasn’t muddy at all. After a short sit at the shelter, Rich suggested rather than going back down, we could go north on the LT for a bit to where it intersects with the Catamount (x-c ski) and VAST (snowmobile) trails and then go down the VASTtrail back to the base of the Beane Trail then home again. After a check of how much water we had left and some figgerin’ about how much extra time/distance it would be, I agreed.

 Along the way, I was surpised at how manydifferent varieties of Trillium were still in bloom. One that we saw a lot of were Painted Trillium. I didn’t have my camera, but I’m a crappy photographer anyway. Here is a photo by a Vermont woman who has many beautiful photos of Vermont flowers on her blog. (Thanks Lene!)

I also found a photo of another flower we saw on her blog – called Clintonia.

Another one we saw a lot of at a higher elevation was the Purple Trillium which I found on this web page.

When we headed down the snowmobile trail it was like a bog -so muddy from all the rain. But mud is a good place to see footprints. And we saw plenty! One set that went along the trail was from a moose.  It was big. I put my foot in the print and it was wider than my foot and about 2/3 the length.

The other prints we saw were cat paw prints. BIG cat paw prints. I’ll have to find a tracker book to see if it was way too big to have been a bobcat (apparently that’s the case based on how big my neighbor’s eyes got when I showed her the size of the prints) or a cougar (aka “catamount”).

All in all I think we ended up doing about 5.5 miles which was a little more than either of us were ready for. But it was fun! Today was a good day to sit at the computer.

 

Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

So you want to start a user group? (or get ideas to improve on one?): Wed May 31st

Dave Noderer, Jason Beres and I will be doing an INETA Live webcast this Wednesday, May 31st at 3:30 EST, about Starting a User Group.

Dave started and runs one of the larger groups (a consortium of groups, actually) in the U.S., Florida .NET, which Jason helped start. I started and run Vermont.NET, one of the smaller groups in the U.S. With our involvement in INETA oer the years, Dave and I have talked with many many user group leaders and done lots of hand holding to groups that were just getting going. So we bring a lot to the table

You can register for the Live Meeting at live.ineta.org.



Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

IDEP Responds to Indonesia Earthquake

IDEP is the organizaton that I worked closely with after the devastating tsunami in Dec 2004. As a local organization, they were able to respond immedately and effectively to the worst affected area – Aceh Province. They continue their steady work in Aceh and the organization has grown. As soon as I read about the earthquake yesterday, the first thing I did was go look at their site to see if there was any news.

This morning, I received this email.



Dear friends of IDEP,
 
On Saturday the 27th of May at 5:55 am an Earthquake measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale hit Central Java with the epicenter in the sea south of the city of Jogyakarta. The earthquake lasted for over 57 seconds with a second smaller earthquake occurring at 10.15 am. It appears that Bantul area south of Jogyakarta bore the brunt of the damage with almost all buildings being flattened and deaths numbering in the hundreds also Klaten has been badly affected. In Jogyakarta the quake caused serious structural damage to many of the cities buildings.



The current death toll is close to 5,000 and expected to rise, injured 20,000, and countless people are still buried in the rubble. Over 200,000 people are currently displaced, many of whom lost everything when their houses collapsed.

Through our partners in the area IDEP has received reports of many people not having eaten since the quake struck. Stockpiles of food, medicines and shelter prepared for the impending volcanic eruption of mount Merapi, which is in the same area are being exhausted.

IDEP is responding to the crisis.

Today, IDEP sent a team of 6 volunteers, with a truck full of medicine and emergency relief supplies, to the affected area. They will assist with search and rescue, deliver much needed emergency supplies and offer assistance to the local teams that are already on the ground – who have been working around the clock since the disaster struck. The experienced team of volunteers from Bali are expected to arrive tomorrow midday, road conditions permitting.

Today, IDEP also emptied its bank account’s emergency reserve fund to initiate the purchasing of Aid Buckets and other Emergency supplies through two of our trusted local partners in the area:

  • Yayasan IBU / Rakata – key partners in the delivery of aid in 2005 to the Tsunami struck Calang, and
  • Kelompok Peduli Bencana / KAPPALA – A group of local volunteers headed up by Eko Teguh (expert advisor to IDEP’s Community Based Crisis response Program)
As with our Tsunami appeal, where IDEP channeled over US$ 1,000,000 of funds donated by people like you to help victims, we are again calling for donations to help victims of the Java Quake. IDEP will continue to collect funds and channel assistance to victims of the Java Earthquake over the next few weeks and continue to asses the needs on the ground as the situation unfolds. We will be sending out regular updates about progress on the ground.



If you are able to help

Please visit our website for complete donation details
:www.idepfoundation.org/idep_donate.php

More information about IDEP’s activates in Jogyakarta will be posted on our website www.idepfoundation.org as of tomorrow.

For information about making donations contact : info@idepfoundation.org

Thank you so much for any help you are able to provide.

What lucky geeks you are! A new MSDN DCC.

MSDN has added another female Developer Community Champion to it’s ranks.

Meet  Lindsay Rutter:

Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Southern California, Virginia, West Virginia
http://blogs.msdn.com/lindsay

How many Microsoft presenters can claim they were “locked in” at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences with Mira Sorvino? Lindsay, for one. It’s a story you’ll have to get straight from the source. She has also produced content for a high traffic television network site and the internet division of one of America’s largest banks, where she helped to choose and implement a deployment tool for multiple data centers. Lindsay enjoys coding in C++, but admits that C# is quickly vying for her affections. She’s also proficient in Unix, Visual Studio 2005, OOD concepts, HTML/CSS, XML, Java, JavaScript, Perl, .NET, relational database concepts, and computer security and forensics tools including Autopsy and Encase 5.0. Lindsay graduated with a B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Southern California, where she was part of a team that researched how to implement an Internet-capable computer lab in a school in N’Djili in the Democratic Republic of the Congo – an area that has no telephone services and receives electricity only three days per week. As a developer, Lindsay loves solving technical problems and formulating solutions that are precisely tailored to her clients’ needs.

Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org

In the hammock

A beautiful summer-like afternoon. As I took a few minutes to laze in the hammock, I thought of all my poor city dwelling friends around the world and ran indoors to get my digital camera. For the very short (but 22MB video) click here.

 

Don’t Forget: www.acehaid.org