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  • Community Megaphone

    This is a cool site, that I hope takes off. In the words of its creator: I wanted to drop you all a note about a project I’ve been working on called Community Megaphone . Community Megaphone is a web site I started building about a year ago to fill what I saw as a need in the local community: simple, low-friction promotion and discovery of developer events, particularly community-run events. Initially, the site was limited to a portion of the east coast, but this week I’ve opened the site up to events from the entire United States. The need for some central location where you can find community events is high. While it is good that each event has its own web site for details and discussions, the value of a central index would be incredible! Please support Andrew's initiative! Read More...
  • Strangeloop

    Strangeloop is one of the coolest products I've seen (not as cool as Surface, but that's hard to top :) ). This product is an ASP.NET-aware device that does intelligent caching for web sites. It can do things that seem virtually impossible - it is that cool! Here's Richard Campbell's blog entry with more background. If you have the need for a nearly transparent boost in performance for your ASP.NET web site, Strangeloop is something you should look at! For more information go to www.lhotka.net . Read More...
  • Emerging Technologies: Interview with Rockford Lhotka on PolymorphicPodcast

    I was recently interviewed by Craig Shoemaker for polymorphicpodcast.com , and that interview is now online for listening . For more information go to www.lhotka.net . Read More...
  • VS Live San Francisco and Microsoft Vista

    I am the track chair for Vista Live!, one of the sub-conferences of VS Live! San Francisco . This conference will be held March 25-29, 2007. As track chair, it is my job to recruit speakers and help select sessions around software development and Windows Vista and .NET 3.0. Windows Vista has some major impacts on software development. Perhaps most notably, having users (and developers) run in a non-Admin account affects how both development tools and end-user applications install and run. And then there are the new shell features, and integrated RSS support. Add to this .NET 3.0, with WCF, WPF, WF and WCS, and there's a lot of ground to cover. If you would like to speak at VS Live in March, on a Windows Vista related topic, please use this online proposal submission form to submit your idea. For more information go to www.lhotka.net . Read More...
  • Twin Cities Code Camp

    Jason Bock, a colleague of mine at Magenic, is organizing a code camp in the Twin Cities for November 11, 2006. Click here for details. I'll be speaking at the event, though I haven't decided on a topic yet. For more information go to www.lhotka.net . Read More...
  • MSDN Library free for downloading

    I submit that this is a good move by Microsoft: making the MSDN Library available for free download. Some may argue that this devalues the MSDN subscription - but frankly that's silly. The vast majority of the Library is available online anyway, all Microsoft has done here is provided a more convenient way to access the data. It isn't like they decided to give away the software for free! Personally I haven't installed the Library on my machine for well over a year, because I find the web access more convenient. Dollar per bit, an MSDN subscription is an unbeatable deal for a developer. The ability to get almost every OS, server and development tool for the purposes of development at just over the cost of Visual Studio alone is really quite amazing when you think about it. Other people will likely argue that this is in response to government actions (the EU in particular). If so, then so be it. I think the EU is out of control and will likely do serious harm to European consumers, and maybe to Microsoft. But the upside for me is that I work for a consulting company, and the more variations on the OS the more time it takes us to build even simple software. Since we charge by the money, it merely means that software for use in the EU will make us more money that software for use in the US or elsewhere. So perhaps I should be rooting for the EU, because in some perverse way they're likely to make me more money? Regardless, even if Microsoft is releasing the Library free to help mitigate some "openness" issues in the EU, that is only good news for developers who (for some reason) find it hard to get the content over the Internet. My view is this: I've worked with IBM software, and the lack of an MSDN-equivalent is devastating to productivity. And I've worked with (and continue to work with) open source software, where the lack of decent documentation and organized support materials is infamous. The investment Microsoft has always made around supporting developer productivity through documentation and MSDN is one of its key success factors - at least in the development world. To me, this is just another small step in Microsoft's continuing support for developers on their platform. For more information go to www.lhotka.net . Read More...

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