Christian Nagel lists and links to some of the latest European additions to INETA. It is amazing and wonderful to see where user groups are popping up!
How many Canadian Regional Director’s does it take to screw in a light bulb?
Just kidding!
Kate Gregory writes about the recent Regional Director Summit in Canada. Here’s what goes on and links to a Microsoft.ca site area all about the RDs.
Neighborhood bullies have arrived
oh no – the blue jays have discovered my bird feeders!
Tablet Training for DEVELOPERS in Denver today and San Francisco Tomorrow!!!
Don’t forget the TabletPC Tour is starting up! Today in Denver, tomorrow in S.F.
Full schedule and registration are here www.tabletpctraining.com.microsoft
(see time & location below)
This free course provides an overview of Windows XP Tablet PC Edition features for developers, architects, systems integrators, and solution providers. Plan to spend a few hours with us and we’ll teach you what you need to know to get started. The sessions will cover:
- Tablet PC Platform Overview
- The Tablet APIs, Object Model, and available components and controls
- Complete coverage of the new features available with Windows XP Tablet PC 2004 Edition
- Code samples and demonstrations across all the main features
- Discussions around designing and deploying Tablet PC Applications
- Q & A time for more in-depth questions
- Each session will be delivered by Microsoft Tablet Employees or a Recognized Tablet PC Expert from the Leszynski Group. This is an opportunity you don’t want to miss. Register soon, as space is limited.
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DENVER
Date: Wednesday, May 5 2004
Start Time: 2:00 PM
End Time: 5:00 PM
Brown Palace Hotel
321 17th St
Denver, Colorado 80202
United States
Room: Ballroom (A/B – TBA)
SAN FRANCISCO
Thursday, May 6 2004
Start Time: 2:00 PM
End Time: 5:00 PM
Hilton Downtown San Francisco
333 O’farrell St
San Francisco, California 94102
United States
Room: Continental Parlors 1-3
What are Ingo and Christian up to anyway?
taking the 70-330 cert beta
Well I took the 70-330 Beta security exam today. I was pretty poorly prepared with short notification of it’s availability (and this afternoon was the cut-off time to take the beta) with no ability to invent much time to focus on prepping. I had almost cancelled, but decided to bite the bullet, cram as much as I could and take it.
Horrors! It was hard and gruelling. I think I am a really bad test taker for one. I found myself often reading the convoluded twisty questions (this is not new to MS cert tests from all I have heard over the years) more than once since I had a hard time just focusing on them.
Being a beta this was a long test.
There was nothing in there that I was unfamiliar with but I think my broad understanding of concepts far exceeds my ability to memorize lots of complex syntax.
However, the time spent was not a bust. In my cramming effort, I touched on a lot of .net security stuff that I hadn’t worked with yet and found Keith Brown’s awesome book. I may not be able to code it blind, but I do think I know when I would use which piece of security and what to look for in the documentation to drill into enough to excecute my code and my ideas properly. This is a much greater value to me than the certification. Besides, my certain miserable failure will probably help lower the bar and make the final structure of the test a little easier.
This won’t however, stop me from taking some of the tests cold for 1/2 price at TechEd – the ones that are on things I do and use every day.
Kathleen Dollard on dotNET Rocks this Thursday night!
New to blogging, but well-versed in programming!! Kathleen is a true VB and Code Generation expert, an MVP and you have likely seen her many many articles in Visual Studio Magazine.
She’s on dotNetRocks this Thursday night 10-12pm EST.
Rory and I will be talking with Kathleen Dollard about code generation, reflection, and other topics this Thursday night on .NET Rocks! Live at 10PM EST It is rumored that Don Kiely will stop by as well! We’ll be giving away a copy of Microsoft Office Professional 2003 to a lucky listener, so come and hang out! Don’t forget to send us your Dumb Emails!
Keith Brown’s on line .NET Security book is even entertaining
Security guru Keith Brown’s A .NET Developer’s Guide to Windows Security is on line and I’m reading parts of it in my last minute cramming for the 70-330 beta exam. Ach – I have to leave in 1 1/2 hours!
Anyway, I love stuff like this:
From the chapter on Configuring Security for a COM(+) Client (item 53):
It’s a pity that I even have to write this piece, or that it needs to be as complicated as this, but the COM Interop team, while they are content to automate the call to CoInitializeEx for you, apparently don’t feel the same about helping you with security. In fact, in a simple console or Windows Forms application, for example, nobody in the framework bothers to call CoInitializeSecurity. Didn’t anyone on these teams read [PWS]? Arrrgh!
and further on
Here’s the fun part. The normal place where you should call CoInitializeSecurity is when your program first starts up, right after your main thread calls CoInitializeEx. But the .NET Framework takes care of calling CoInitializeEx for you. It does it lazily the first time you make a COM interop call. But by the time you’ve made a COM interop call, it’s already to late to call CoInitializeSecurity! Bah!
Security Beta Exam – 3 more hours!
I took the absolutely last possible time slot to take the Security Beta Exam (vb 70-330, c# 70-430)
I just wanted to point out (and say thanks!) Jason Row’s compilation of info for this test. Most of the official materials won’t be out for quite some time.
Nice security Pop Quiz
Good little lesson in security and deployment over here at Early & Adopter