Yah – sounds like a paid message but really, I’m so loving PPT 2007. Here’s one reason why…
[A DevLife post]
Yah – sounds like a paid message but really, I’m so loving PPT 2007. Here’s one reason why…
[A DevLife post]
Did I really forget to blog this? I know I have sent out emails to VTdotNET members, but we now have TWO MSDN events in March right here in Burlington.
In addition to the “classic” MSDN event on March 13th (Vista/.NET 3.0/Office 2007 Development) [register here: http://www.msdnevents.com/march/]
…
there is the Chris & Bob Road Show.
Chris Bowen (our new D.E.) and Bob Familiar, also fo Microsoft New England, will be presenting a full day of .NET 3.0 development. It’s free. it’s at the sheraton. It’s March 1st. Here are details and registration info.
You can thank Bove’s Restaurant for this being on our schedule. Chris is an addict!
The Waltham Westin is our favorite place to stay when we go to Code Camp in Waltham, MA. The next one, Code Camp 7: Deer in the Headlights! is coming Mar 31 – Apr 1.
The Westin has a great bar/lounge area so it’s a nice place to hang out with all the CC geeks! Breakfast is pretty expensive, but there’s always Dunkin Donuts!
The only problem is that it’s a pricey hotel, but if you keep your eyes open, they will occasionally have specials. Last night, I happened to check (even though I already had a reserveration elsewhere) and the [online non-refundable] room rate for that weekend is now $92 before taxes.
So I’ve cancelled the other, and booked at the Westin along with my roomie, Laura Blood.
Frances Allen, who has a grand legacy at IBM with her work in compilers was awarded the Turing Award this year. The award has been around since 1966. She’s the first woman who has ever gotten it. Very cool. Thanks to Carl Franklin for making sure I didn’t miss this!
After 17 years hobbling along on a now shaky FoxPro 2.6 application, it was time to pay the piper and write a shiny new program. Was it worth the effort? Heck yeah! Read more…
A DevLife post
After 8 INETA trips (speaking at 15 user groups), two code camps (both overnight trips), conferences in Orlando, Milwaukee, Montreal, Bulgaria and Las Vegas and then summit at Microsoft – all of this in 2006, I promised myself that I was staying home for the winter. After the last trip (in early December) I was not going to travel again until DevConnections at the end of March this year. Though it ended up meaning that I had to pass on the MVP Summit in mid-March, I’ve stuck to my promise. (I’m sneaking past the fact that I’ll be doing a quick overnight in Albany at Tech Valley .NET (about 3 hours away) in mid-March.
But I can feel it starting again already. I have my reservations for DevConnections. The day after I return from Orlando, I have to drive to Massachussets for Code Camp for the weekend and then a few weeks after that I’ll be flying out to Seattle (see I get to go after all :-)) in April to speak at the South Sound .NET Group in Olympia. I’m skipping MIX07 but of course contemplating TechEd.
I will really relish the next month in Vermont, even if I spend most of it in front of the computer.
I didn’t realize that the VTSQL meeting originally scheduled for tonight has been re-scheduled for Wednesday night. More info at www.vtsql.org.
At a recent check-up, my doctor reminded me that now that I’m getting to be such an old lady (okay, she didn’t quite put it that way) I need to be more conscientious about my calcium intake. I asked her if the half & half in my coffee counted. No. How about the small bowl of ice cream once in a while in the evening? No.
I remember my mother telling me about a doctor appt she had in her late 60’s (not so long ago) when the doctor complemented her on how strong and healthy her bones were. Her reply to the doctor was that it was thanks to all those cookies she eats, because when she eats cookies, she pours a glass of milk to go with them.
So after lunch that day, (thanks to my husband’s habit of stockpiling cookies in the house (which is normally a really big problem for me)), I happily placed 2 Oreo cookies on my plate, poured myself a glass of milk, and fed my bones.
Since a few people have asked me in email (which is not a problem…), I thought I’d make mention that the next CTP for Orcas is the February CTP. It is coming out either late February or early March. This version, though still a CTP, should have all of the LINQ and EF stuff updated and incorporated, including the UI stuff such as the designer and the templates that we currently have to go back to the May CTP for, as well as some major enhancements to LINQ in VB, a LinqDataSource for databinding in web apps and more.
I have been using Quickbooks since it’s DOS 1.0 version. I kid you not.
My pet peeve with this software is online banking. When I download my AmEx bill, it takes me a horrrrrrrribly long time to get the transactions into my register.
I paid $200 to upgrade from QB 2004 (?) to the newest version and even though there are some minor improvements, I’m still here looking at a few hours to deal with the many months of AmEx bills I have avoided getting in to QuickBooks. Every time I download and start working on it, I give up. So now they are piled up and of coruse I MUST get through them because it’s tax time.
I think it will take less time to just sit here with my paper statements and enter them by hand.
Why can’t they figure out a better way? I don’t need a vendor account for every random gas station I go to in my travels. Maybe I’ll try the aliasing and set up a “GENERIC GAS STATION” payee account and others.
Update: Now I see the benefit of the aliasing. The more info you have in there, the smarter it gets. It’s not perfect, but at least I got through it a little faster than before.