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Thursday, July 17, 2008
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Five Minutes Past Noon Coffee 170 »
Morning Coffee 169
Check out the crowd
for a the Washington Capitals developmental camp scrimmage last week (My parents are in their somewhere). Standing room only in the practice facility to watch a bunch of kids, most of whom won't ever make it to the NHL, in July. If you think Washington can't be a hockey town, you are sorely mistaken.
Speaking of the Caps, they are establishing a "
spirit squad
"? Is that really necessary? (short answer: no).
Peerless' take
is hilarious.
Seshadri Vijayaraghavan
is a tester on the DLR team and he's been writing quite a bit about the DLR hosting API. He's got a series of posts about
hosting
,
invoking
and
redirecting output
from IronPython in a C# application.
I haven't seen an official announcement, but
mobile access to Live Mesh is available
by pointing your phone browser to
http://m.mesh.com
. It's mostly a web view of the Live Desktop, though there is a feature to upload photos from your phone. However, for some reason that feature doesn't work for me right now. I don't get the "browse" button.
ASP.NET MVC Preview 4 is
available for download
. Phil Haack has
a few details
that ScottGu didn't cover. Scott Hanselman shows off
some AJAX stuff
.
Speaking of Scott Hanselman, he
highlights
the
return of Terrarium
from
Bil Simser
. Scott mentions that most Terrarium animal implementations were big collections of nested if statements. I wonder if F# pattern matching would be a cleaner approach?
Ted Neward obviously never "even tangentially" touched politics, as I think they have far worse flame wars far more often than we have in the software industry. However, certainly the Scala flame war
he's commenting on
seems fairly counterproductive.
Brad Wilson
runs into a wall
trying to convert a string to an arbitrary Nullable<T>.He doesn't find an answer, but I found reading thru the steps he took to try and find an answer strangely compelling.
Jeff Atwood argues that
Maybe Normalization isn't Normal
. It's mostly a collection of information from other places, including a compilation of high-scale database case studies. But it's a useful collection of info and links, with a little common-sense thrown in for good measure.
I have a hard time imagining
Pat Helland camping
.
Posted By
Harry Pierson
at 10:52 AM Pacific Daylight Time
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