Passion * Technology * Ruthless Competence

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Morning Coffee 102

Seems like a slow week.

  • Jules and I went to see the latest Harry Potter movie this past weekend. It's easily the weakest of the six HP stories so far. The first two stories were about discovering this magical world, the next two about discovering Harry's past, and the last two about confronting said past. That leaves OotP as the odd-story-out, mostly bridging from the end of the fourth story to the start of the sixth.
  • Speaking of movies, the new movie feature of Mobile Search v2 rocks, though I have two quick suggestions. First, it would be nice to have a time-sorted view of when a given movie is playing. So if it's playing at 4pm at one theater and 4:30pm at another, you'd see them in a list ordered that way. Second, how about an option to buy tickets directly from the phone?
  • If you're interested in WPF and 3D, Eric Sink has a series for you.
  • Old news, but Windows Home Server RTMed on Monday. I'm really looking forward to this product.
  • I was looking for some information on how WCF pumps messages in the service host and I found this post from Maheshwar Jayaraman. Between that post and Reflector, I think I've got a good handle on how ChannelDispatcher works.
  • Larry O'Brein calls out three MS Research Projects. Microsoft Research Accelerator is a high-level data-parallel library that targets GPUs. Graph Layout Execution Engine (aka GLEE) is a library for graph layout and viewing. VirtualEarth MapCruncher converts existing maps (PDF and bitmaps) to work with Virtual Earth.
  • Ted Neward weighs in on the David Chappell's Korean War REST vs. WS-* analogy. Skim the history lesson, but make sure you read his points about security and reliability interop. WS-* has addressed these areas, so if you need those capabilities, why wouldn't you use WS-* to get them rather than re-invent the wheel? As for the history lesson, Ted does say he thinks software development is more analogous to making war than building a house. He expands on that idea and recommends Robert Greene's The 33 Strategies of War. I want to read the book and mull it over a bit, but I certainly see where Ted's coming from.
Posted By Harry Pierson at 9:06 AM Pacific Daylight Time
Comments are closed.

SoCal Code Camp

PDC08

patterns & practices
Summit 2008

Change Congress
Recent Bookmarks
Tags .NET Framework (2) ADO.NET (5) Agile (7) AJAX (3) Architecture (284) Guidance (6) Interop (2) Modelling (61) Patterns (7) Process (4) SOA (93) Web Services (5) ASP.NET (24) Battlestar Galactica (3) BI (2) BizTalk (4) Blogging (115) dasBlog (11) Podcasting (4) BPM (1) C# (10) C++ (4) Capitals (5) CardSpace (3) CLR (2) College Football (10) Comedy Central (1) Community (81) Concurrency (6) Consumer Electronics (1) Database (13) Dependency Injection (2) Development (117) C Plus Plus (1) Embedded (5) Lanugages (37) Media (2) P2P (11) Rotor (1) SharePoint (6) SOP (3) DIY (1) DLR (16) Domain Specific Languages (13) Durable Messaging (5) Dynamic Languages (10) Dynamic Silverlight (1) Education (3) Enterprise 2.0 (1) Entertainment (14) ETech (15) F# (51) Functional Programming (17) Game Development (2) Guidance Automation (3) Hardware (8) HawkEye (3) Hockey (29) Home Electronics (1) Home Network (5) Humor (5) IASA (1) Idempotence (3) infrastructure (5) Instrumentation (4) Integration (2) IronPython (45) IronRuby (12) Java (2) Job (3) LINQ (23) Live Mesh (2) Lost (1) Master Data Management (1) Media 2.0 (6) Microsoft (30) MIX06 (2) Mobile Phone (1) Monads (5) Morning Coffee (172) Object Oriented (4) Office (5) Open Source (5) Open Space (2) Operations (3) Other (135) Art (1) Books (1) Family (31) Games (18) General Geekery (26) Home Theater (1) Movies (23) Music (20) Politics (3) Society (1) Sports (37) Working at MSFT (15) Parallel Programming (3) Parsing Expression Grammar (16) patterns & practices (2) PDC08 (5) Politics (47) PowerPoint (2) PowerShell (34) Presentation (5) Projects (1) HawkWiki (1) Python (4) Quote of the Day (4) Refactoring (1) Research (2) REST (18) Reuse (5) Robotics (2) Rock Band (4) Rome (5) Ruby (23) Ruby on Rails (1) Sci-Fi (2) Scripting (4) Security (3) Service Broker (14) SharePoint (2) Silverlight (18) Social Software (1) Software + Services (2) Software Design (1) Software Factories (11) Software Industry (1) Spark (1) SQL Server (2) Stephen Colbert (1) TechEd (7) TechEd06 (1) TechRec League (1) Television (6) Travel (6) Unified Client (1) Unit Testing (4) USC (1) UX (1) Virtual PC (2) Visual Basic (1) Visual Studio (20) Volta (2) Washington Capitals (34) WCF (31) Web 2.0 (65) Web Services (5) WF (21) Windows Live (23) WPF (7) Xbox (1) Xbox 360 (53) XML (11) XNA (14) Zune (4)
Disclaimer: The information in this weblog is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. This weblog does not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans or strategies of my employer. It is solely my opinion. Inappropriate comments will be deleted at the authors discretion.