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Wednesday, June 27, 2007
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Morning Coffee 95
New version of
dasBlog
is out, the final version on ASP.NET 1.1 (unless this release "kills a kitten" as per Scott Hanselman). I don't have the time (make the time?)to run daily builds, but I do try and upgrade to new major releases in a timely fashion. I'm also moving hosters, so expect a little downtime around here at some point in the near future.
Matt Winkler is doing a series on
alternate WF execution patterns
. His first is the
N of M pattern
. While I can
nitpick some things
in WF - especially the
limitations of transaction flow
- WF's support for variability and extensibility of execution patterns is fraking brilliant. (via
Sam Gentile
)
Joe McKendrick is all excited about a
SOA built without web services
! We've been "doing SOA" since the EDI days without web services, so I'm not sure this level of excitement - with an exclamation point and everything - is warranted. But it is good to see people realize web services != SOA. Instead of web services,
CERN is using JMS
to move messages around. I don't know much about
JMS
, but I do know it supports async and durable messaging, two things I think are critical for enterprise services.
I
saw on LtU
that there's a
new paper
on
Singularity
out. For those who don't know, Singularity is a MS Research platform designed for reliability instead of performance. But there's more than just a new paper. According to the project
home page
, "Singularity Version 1.0 is complete. We've shipped the Singularity Research Development Kit (RDK) to a small number of universities for their research efforts." I wonder if I can get my hands on that RDK?
Jeff Atwood is
starting to show ads
on Coding Horror, but he's donating "a significant percentage" of the ad revenue back into the programming community. He's starting with $5,000 and Microsoft is matching for a total of $10,000 to be donated to
open source .NET projects
.
Go tell Jeff
which projects you think he should donate to.
Castle
seems to be an early favorite.
On Monday, Nick Malik
posted
what he called the
Simple Lifecycle Agility Maturity Model
(aka SLAMM) as a way of measuring your "agile factor". Surprisingly, the community response has been zilch. After
Nick's comments on Agile
last week, I figured
someone
would have
something
to say about it, even if only to slam it. (Slam SLAMM, ha ha.) Maybe nobody opened
the spreadsheet
and saw Mort has an agile factor rating of 71%? Personally, SLAMM seems like a rather coarse tool for measuring how agile you are, but coarse tools are better than no tools at all.
Posted By
Harry Pierson
at 9:56 AM Pacific Daylight Time
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