I just got an email from my MVP Lead, Rafael Munoz, who has been on leave for 6 weeks to get to know his new baby. Now that I have met Rafael and a number of the leads, it makes me smile to get his emails. These folks are MVP leads for a reason. They are really just the nicest people and they love what they are doing. I know that this sounds really gooey – but I swear it’s true. Being an MVP lead used to be a “side” task to a Microsoft employees regular job. But the program has been modified a great deal and now it is a full time dedicated position.
Go to DevDays 2004 and go home with Whidbey!
http://www.microsoft.com/seminar/devdays2004/default.mspx
It will be in 32 cities during the month of March.
Not only do you get a full day of awesome training. Not only is it cheap ($75 before Feb 10th, $99 after). But you will walk away with the “technology preview“ of Whidbey. Ummm- I think that translates as the Alpha Bits.
How cool.
So when you see this little description on the website:
In either track, you’ll see a local expert build a real-world best-practice application, see the application in action, and leave with the code at the end of the day.
you can think of me, because in Boston, MA and Hartford, CT, I’ll be that “local expert”, building the secure ASP.NET app.
SAMS/QUE, DevDays, TechEd and my friend Amy
Amy Sorokas has been somewhat of a muse for me.
When I started Vermont.NET two years ago, I emailed SAMS to see if I could get some books for the user group. I got an email back from Amy Sorokas saying – “hey, have you heard of INETA?”. I hadn’t. (If you know me, you know that I am extremely involved with INETA to this day.)
When I started learning a thing or two about .NET I sent a few ideas to DotNetJunkies. There was Amy Sorokas again, helping out with the articles and authors who were writing for the site. It took me a while to figure out where I knew the name from and one day I wrote to her and said “Oh, I know – you’re from SAMS!”
I finally met Amy in the flesh this past summer at TechEd in Dallas. I don’t know why I hadn’t expected a cute, hip young woman to have been the same person who had been my muse.
Amy has a weblog now on GeekswithBlogs, even though I dare say, she’s not really very geeky.
Amy does write about what she is doing at SAMS. Over these past two years, I have gotten the impression that this is way more than “just a job” to her. She really loves what she does, she is very proud of her company and even more proud to be involved in a process which enables so many bright folks to publish many of the books that we depend on to learn the tools of our trade. And when SAMS was moving offices this summer, I kept getting these big boxes full of books (and some pens and cups). She was cleaning out her office and VTdotNET was the beneficiary!
Amy just wrote that not only will SAMS be supporting DevDays 2004 , but they will be a Bronze Sponsor of TechEd. This is a big deal for a relatively small company. I think it’s great. Yeah Amy!
That’s my story about Amy Sorokas.
Exception Declaration Convention
In a Catch statement I often try to catch specific types of exceptions and then a generic exception.
The generic is
catch ex as Exception
A HTTP
catch hEx as HTTPException
But a SQL
catch exS as SQLException
Isn’t that silly, that I can’t bring myself to follow the convention for SQLExceptions?
MoveOn.org Bush Ads Contest – Vote Now
Attention Tom Lehrer fans….
I was surprised to see this same blog post title on K.C. Lemson’s blog today, and having been raised on Tom Lehrer, I had to check out her link. It is as visually charming and interesting as Tom Lehrer’s music and lyrics are to the ear and mind. I wonder if they will do the Russian cities next, or (egads) the Irish Stew song!
The DotCom Dr. Kovorkian moves to Silicon Valley
CNN has a doom and gloom story about Martin Pichinson’s recent move to Silicon Valley. He is a business advisor who has laid 6,500 tech firms to rest since 1999.
Crystal Reports and my phone bill
A discussion on the ASPAdvice listserv about Crystal Reports brought back a crusty old memory. First I should say, I use Crystal Reports and have been since Crystal 6.0. I have a love/hate relationship with Crystal. I love the reports I am able to create. I hate when I am forced to delve into any new territory with them. (I have not even considered going to web reporting with Crystal for other reasons.) The worst was the nightmare upgrade to Crystal 8. Granted, I was going from 6 all the way to 8 in one leap. All of my apps were broken. I spent innumerable [unbillable] hours fixing applications and on the phone with [very unhappy yet thankfully, patient] clients trying to get the proper components installed on win95 and win98 machines. The one thing that was the saving grace was the free technical phone support. I didn’t mind as my long distance rate was 5 cents a minute. I got to be a pro at checking the status and wait times on their website before trying to dial in. And everyone was very helpful and very friendly. And then my phone bill came. I was calling Canada at $1.25/minute. I had $550 of phone calls to the free tech support. I could have purchased a one year tech support plan for a lot less than $550. I wrote them a long email tale of woe, explaining also how they lost out on selling a 1 year support contract. I had no expectation of them paying my bill, but I was trying to convince them to find some way of letting people know that this was most likely going to be long distance. When VS.NET was released with CR.NET in there, I saw the same lovely offer of free phone tech support for a certain period. And the same phone number. And no warning.
Geek Dinner in Burlington, VT tonight
With Carl Franklin in town (doing three days of training at a local company), we are getting together tonight at Three Tomatoes on Church Street in downtown Burlington for dinner at 6pm. Bundle up and get ready for garlic!
Admin’s Attic – Coming to Burlington, too
As per my pal, Thom Robbins (MS New England)
Microsoft Presents: The Admin’s Attic with John and Rich (Winter Wonderland Edition)
Two guys taking the work out of your network!
The inaugural Admin’s Attic sessions presented in October were so well received Microsoft is pleased to bring John Kelbley and Rich McBrine back for a second road show. John and Rich are Microsoft technology specialists who focus on infrastructure solutions. They are the guys who delivered the Windows Server 2003 Launch events across New England and got rave reviews because they focus on tools and techniques admins can put to use immediately. Please join them for a highly technical session in which they will show you how to save time and money by taking advantage of Windows management tools and scripts. They will demo the improvements in Windows Server 2003 compared to the NT 4.0 world. No fluff or marketing slides; No ROI talk or licensing talk – just registry settings, command lines, and the MMC. Rich and John have used NT4, 2003 & everything in between, and are convinced they can show you a compelling world of difference. These events will include live demos around real-world implementations of Microsoft technology, including:
NT4 to Windows Server 2003 Upgrade – file system and AD (a live demo of tools and procedures, step-by-step)
Server Hardening, tips, tricks, and techniques – how to lock down systems by policy
Monitoring using Reskit too
ls, the command line, and Microsoft Operations Manager
Target Audience:
For more information on the Admin’s Attic show, visit
IT Professionals
Lots and lots of interactive discussion and white boarding
Cool prizes
Burlington, VT – 2/12/04
Event Code: 1032242474 Sponsored by: SymQuest
Location: SymQuest, 30 Community Drive, South Burlington, VT
Check in is at 8:30. The event runs from 9:00-12:00.
Also in New England
Waltham, MA – 2/3/04
Farmington, CT – 2/6/04
Portland, ME – 2/10/04
Bedford, NH – 2/11/04
Register today for the session nearest you at www.microsoft.com/usa/events or by calling 877-673-8368.