#  Monday, October 27, 2008
Conference Season Begins!!

 

It was hard. I had to change 6 values in a SQL table to turn off the blogging feature of the Pwop Publishing System (PPS)… (tm). The feeds put up a valiant fight, however, and it looked like they would never retreat, but as I lifted my rifle to my eye and watched the carnage as the last bit field was set to zero I thought to myself… “I’m takin’ this blog back, beyOTCH!!”

Now that the smoke has cleared a bit I am free to post. Let’s get the obvious one out of the way first, my recent trip to Europe for round one of conference season. SDN in Amsterdam, the Krakow .NET User Group in Poland, and DevReach in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Amsterdam

Sdn_logo_80I arrived at SDN on Monday Morning, October 6th with not really anything to do except to get some interviews and have fun. By the way, what is the average interval of time that a traveler to a foreign country will wait with his or her hands under an automatic sink faucet before he or she realizes that it’s not working? The guy in the men’s room at SDN that day skewed the curve by waiting an epic 20 seconds with a pissed-off look on his face. WTF, dude, 20 seconds???

So after some obligatory how-do-you-dos I got right to my work and went to sleep. Jet-Lag. That’s the big story of my 4 days in Amsterdam. It took me until the last day to adjust. I blame the 2 year old sitting right behind me on the plane. You know, the minute I walked into Logan Airport in Boston I heard that little bastard crying. I said to myself, “just my luck that kid will be on my flight.” Not ONLY was he on my flight, he sat right behind me, wailing the entire time. Suck it up, kid! Life is hard!…  I’m kidding, of course. I love children. All children. Except for that little crying bastard. I HATE him!

So after I woke up it was dinner time, and after that we adjourned to the bar, where I met up with most of the usual suspects. Miguel Castro, Beth Massi, Tim Huckaby, Stephen Forte, Remi Caron, Julie Lerman, Shawn Wildermuth, and a few others. Out came the microphones, and Miguel was my first victim. He told a story about his escapades in a bar in Amsterdam that I can’t repeat here, but it will come out on .NET Rocks! soon. Perhaps we’ll make the 400th show a compilation of all these otherwise unpublishable stories. Here’s a picture of me listening to Stephen Forte (who was with Miguel) tell the rest of this horrible story:

CarlFranklinInterviewingStevenForte

Tim Huckaby didn’t want to be interviewed directly, but instead asked if he could do a few interviews himself. Here he is interviewing Shawn Wildermuth about Silverlight 2 and WPF.

TimInterviewingShawn

SDN, a non-profit developer user group in The Netherlands, is run by Remi Caron (see below).

Remi

He’s eating one of my home-made burgers. Well, it wasn’t just me. Steve Forte, Remi, and I spent all day Wednesday preparing the meal for the rest of the speakers and VIPs who went on a day-tour of Rotterdam. We started out in the kitchen at a restaurant that Remi “rented.” He ordered up a bunch of ribs and hamburger and we were able to chisel off some counter space and do our thing without bothering the chefs. 

Remi made a marinade for the ribs and boiled them in a pot that was at least a meter tall and 2/3 of a meter wide. Forte and I chopped up some onions, and I carmelized them in butter and an absolute PILE of herbs, salt, and cracked pepper. Then we added the translucent onions to the beef, made up about 40 patties, and put them in the fridge.

Burgers

We left the ribs boiling and went out for a long lunch in Amsterdam. Forte was complaining about the lameness of Dutch sandwiches, so Remi took us to a specialty sandwich shop where I got something like carpaccio, cheese, and sliced grapes pressed as a panini and drizzled with a fig reduction. The other sandwiches were equally awesome, and Steve was forced to take back his comments. I think he just hates the Dutch.

We went back to the restaurant and finished the prep work. We put the ribs in travel containers, cleaned up the dishes, gathered up some garnish (tomatoes, cheese, mayo, ketchup, etc.) in a big box, and drove to the place where dinner was being served, Papa’s Beachhouse.

PapasBeachhouse

This place was on a pond, and decorated with Hemingway memorabilia. Pretty cool. They had a nice kitchen where I set to the task of slicing the tomatoes and laying out the garnish platter.  Here’s the kitchen:

Kitchen

And here’s what the serving table looked like before we started cooking the ribs and burgers:

Garnish

The manager was very helpful. Here she is firing up the grill. The indoor grill.

RibsNotCooked

When Steve and Remi started cooking the ribs, that’s when we realized that perhaps an indoor grill wasn’t the best idea.

CookingRibs

Ribs

There was so much smoke in the room, everyone cleared out. We had to coax them back in when it was ready to eat.

BeachHouse

Of course, it was awesome. I don’t think Miguel had a very good day though. From what I understand he had a horrible hangover and spent most of the day green. on the boat. He was a bit woozy by the time he arrived at Papa’s.

It was a long day, but lots of fun. And the next morning I was off to Poland.

CarlInAmsterdam

 

Krakow, Poland

So, a week and a half before my flight to Amsterdam, Tim Huckaby asked a bunch of us RDs if anyone wanted to come to Poland with him to present at a User Group there. Of course, I said yes! So bright and early Thursday morning I got on a plane from Amsterdam to Krakow. I met Tim in Warsaw (the second leg of my flight) where he was speaking at a big Microsoft conference.

After checking in at the Holiday Inn Krakow…

HolidayInn

… we asked the kind lady behind the counter “Where can we get the best traditional Polish food?” and she sent us down the street where we saw lots of stores with this strange sign:

Alkohole

I think they were sex shops or something. I’m not really sure.

After a few minutes walk we ended up at this place:

Folwark

Folwark. Great place. Good beer. Check out these ribs (do you see a pattern here?)

Pork

At the user group meeting, Tim and I started off the presentation like this:

IMG_0688_jpg

IMG_0762_jpg

And the reaction was naturally enthusiastic…

Shock

OK, so that wasn’t the group. Here they are, after learning that my and Tim’s bottles were filled with iced tea and water, respectively.

IMG_0726_jpg

They didn’t think it was as funny as we did, apparently.

Tim did some great demos on Surface development and I did a demo where I played my piano through the Internet.

I play a few notes on a keyboard, capture the MIDI data with a component I wrote in VB.NET, send it over a UDP connection to a daemon running at my studio in Connecticut, which takes the MIDI bytes and sends them out a MIDI port to my Yamaha baby grand piano, which has a MIDI interface, and physically plays the notes – keys going up and down. The whole thing is captured on a webcam and we get to watch it right there in Poland just seconds after I play the notes on the keyboard.

IMG_0789_jpg

This is a picture of me with the network guys trying to get Internet access on my laptop.

Yep. You got it. Didn’t work.

Once we got Internet access we couldn’t punch a hole in the firewall for UDP, so I was basically screwed. It’s a cool demo, and it actually did work in Bulgaria.

This is Barbara, from the local Microsoft Office, and Szymon (pronounced shi-MOAN) who works in Poland for Tim, watching me crash and burn.

IMG_0705_jpg

Actually, I must have done something funny because they seem to be enjoying themselves. Maybe this is where I dropped trou? I can’t remember.

As Tim did his demos I gave him some background music:

IMG_0720_jpg

I think every presenter ought to have a guitar player do a little soundtrack while they’re speaking. It adds so much drama!

Special thanks to Tadeusz Golonka (pronounced jshzshzsh), our fellow Regional Director. Here he is posing with Tim. Tad Rocks!

DSC00813

Afterwards we went out to a nice dinner where I fell asleep.

DSC00814

I actually fell asleep writing an email. Right after I dumped my beer in Barbara’s lap. Sorry, Barbara. Big man tired. Do clumsy things.

The next day Tim and I went out and mingled with the locals, who look very strange to me.

FreeBeer

OK, so that’s not fair. This guy was French.

Tim is Catholic, and was drawn to the Bazylika Mariacka, or “Basilica of Mary”, where Pope John Paul II was said to have preached often. Tim said if he didn’t go in here and take some pictures “The Queen will kill me” and The Queen ain’t his daughter.

BazylikaMariacka

Hey, is that Sam Gentile?? Naw, couldn’t be. He was in Bulgaria, though, I swear he was.

According to this blog post, “It is said that two brothers worked on the basilica, each designing a tower. When the first noticed the construction of his brother became much more high and beautiful, he killed his competitor. Yet after he felt sorry and therefor threw himself from the highest of both towers.”

BazylikaMariacka2

This place was beautiful, no doubt about it. Even an atheist would be impressed.

The ceiling was amazing. I set the timer and put the camera down on the floor looking up through a chandelier.

BazylikaMariackaCeiling

Looks like a spaceship landing.

Next we wandered out to the square and bought some doo-dahs from this nice lady

ChachkeLady

You can’t see it, but Tim is grabbing her ass. She seemed not to mind.

Museum

We spent some considerable time at the Czartoryskis Museum, which houses this portrait by Leonardo Da Vinci

Dama1

Interestingly, they also had a bust of a girl I once knew

Medusa

Next, Tim and I got a walking tour of Krakow, ending up here on Wawel Hill (pronounced VAH-vehl), the central fort and basilica in historic Krakow.

WawelHill

It was getting to be Golden Hour and the photo opportunity was awesome.

WawelHill2

WawelHill3

Heading back to the hotel I saw this, and thought… yeah, we have those back home too.

KrakTour

This trip ends with Tim, Szymon, and myself in a bar watching a Polish Jazz Band and drinking some of the strangest Vodka I’ve ever had. Tim and I stumbled back to the hotel at 3AM, with the understanding that we’d leave for the airport at 6AM. Somehow I got up at 5:30 and got ready. At 6:05 I called and woke up Tim, who uncharacteristically slept through his alarm.

We met shortly afterword down in the lobby. As we’re checking out, Tim mentions to me that he called the front desk for a wake up call but nobody answered. The stocky German manager screams “Zat is impossible!! I vas here all night!! You are an idiot!!!

We just barely made it to the plane.

 

Sofia, Bulgaria

The best thing about speaking at DevReach in Sofia, Bulgaria, is that I get to experience the hospitality of the folks from Telerik. From the moment I arrived I was taken care of. 

I don’t have any photos of the live .NET Rocks! discussion we did on ASP.NET topics, but I do have this from the speaker’s lounge:

SpeakersLounge

As I mentioned, I also did the remote piano demo here, and it worked! The wireless in the room was a bit shaky, but I did get it to work and the crowd seemed to like it. There’s nothing like playing a piano remotely thousands of miles away.

I’ve said it before, but the women in this part of the world are beautiful. The guys are schlubs like us, but the women are something else. Actually, the men have a strange feature. When they get really really drunk their eyes turn bright orange.

RedEyes

See for yourself about the women:

Neli

I blurred out the man in this photo, just so we wouldn’t have to look at him.

Women

Tim, of course, was a wild man.

MoreBulgaria

At one point I caught him making out with Nadia and snapped this photo:

TimCaughtWithAnotherWoman

I’m just kidding. He wasn’t making out with her. But it makes you wonder where his right hand is, doesn’t it?

BulgariaGroupShot

This was the speaker party at a piano bar. They convinced me to play “Piano Man”

CarlAtPianoBar

On the last day they took us to the village of Melnik, near the border of Greece, and home to one of the oldest monastaries in Bulgaria. I wish I had a picture of this, but while we were walking through the village, a beautiful woman (big surprise) leaned out of her second story window with only a towel wrapped around her to say something to our tour guide. She had a watch on the had that was holding up the towel. Forte yells out “someone ask her what time it is!”

After a tour of the winery, which included a nice sample, we sat down to lunch. This is what I had:

Bear

They eat a lot of meat in Bulgaria, actually. That must explain why everyone is physically fit. Not a lot of bread, no carby snacks, no desserts to speak of, and lots of meat and veggies.

After lunch, as we were leaving the restaurant, I spied this magazine in the lobby.

HoreMag

Hmmm… should we tell them? Naaaahh!

 



Conferences and Speaking

Monday, October 27, 2008 6:55:50 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Comments [5]  | 


#  Sunday, October 26, 2008
Show Announcements on This Blog are Ending

 

We currently have two RSS feeds for each show we publish, which doesn’t make sense. One is the podcast feed which contains the media file enclosure as well as the description, and another is this blog which has no files attatched.

In an effort to reclaim my blog I’ve decicded to stop the blog announcements. So, if you are currently looking at this feed, please subscribe to one of the podcast feeds that are listed on the websites for .NET Rocks!, dnrTV, Hanselminutes, RunAs Radio, and the others.

You may see a few more announcements as we make changes to the system, but they should be done by the end of the week.



dnr | dnrTV | Hanselminutes | John Heald's Podcast | Millahseconds | Mondays | Rory Blyth | RunAs Radio | TelerikTV

Sunday, October 26, 2008 7:02:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Comments [6]  | 


#  Thursday, October 23, 2008
RunAs Radio #80 - Itzik Ben-Gan Goes T-SQL on us!

 

RunAs Radio
Itzik Ben-Gan Goes T-SQL on us!

Richard and Greg talk to Itzik Ben-Gan about all things T-SQL in SQL Server 2008. Itzik doesn't just talk about what's new, he talks about what's missing (in his opinion). This is a must-listen for serious SQL geeks! Check out Itzik's web site at http://www.sql.co.il/

http://www.runasradio.com/default.aspx?showNum=80


RunAs Radio

Thursday, October 23, 2008 2:40:51 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Wednesday, October 22, 2008
.NET Rocks! #388 - Bob Martin (Uncle Bob) on Being a Professional!

 

Bob Martin talks about how to achieve Clean Code, which also happens to be the name of his famous book on software development.
.NET Rocks!


dnr

Wednesday, October 22, 2008 11:55:04 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Tuesday, October 21, 2008
.NET Rocks! #387 - Rocky Lhotka on CSLA.NET for Silverlight!

 

Rocky is back to talk about his acclaimed CSLA.NET framework which was just released for Silverlight, allowing you to write CSLA clients in the browser... even running on a Mac!
.NET Rocks!


dnr

Tuesday, October 21, 2008 2:01:32 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Saturday, October 18, 2008
Silverlight Show

 

I have lots more blog posts coming about my recent trip to Amsterdam, Krakow, and Sofia, but at DevReach in Sofia, Bulgaria I was approached by Ilia Iordanov, product manager for silverlightshow.net, a wonderful resource for Silverlight developers. I've been getting into Silverlight 2.0, which just shipped this last week, and a site like this is very helpful to us all. Thanks, Ilia!



Silverlight

Saturday, October 18, 2008 11:02:38 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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#  Friday, October 17, 2008
Hanselminutes #134 - StackOverflow uses ASP.NET MVC - Jeff Atwood and his technical team

 

<StackOverflow uses ASP.NET MVC - Jeff Atwood and his technical team/>

Scott chats with Jeff Atwood of CodingHorror.com and most recently, StackOverflow.com. Jeff and Joel Spolsky and their technical team have created a new class of application using ASP.NET MVC. What works, what doesn't, and how did it all go down?

http://hanselminutes.com/default.aspx?showID=152



Hanselminutes

Friday, October 17, 2008 10:36:20 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 

.NET Rocks! #386 - Interknowlogy Scratches the Surface!

 

Dan Hanan and Kevin Kennedy from Interknowlogy talk about their experiences working with WPF, Surface, and Silverlight. Interknowlogy is run by Tim Huckaby, a long-time guest and friend of .NET Rocks!
.NET Rocks!


dnr

Friday, October 17, 2008 3:13:35 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Wednesday, October 15, 2008
dnrTV #126 - James Kovacs' roll-your-own IoC container

 

dnrtv

James Kovacs' roll-your-own IoC container

James Kovacs shows very clearly how to code up a simple IoC container with just a few lines of code illustrating the concepts of dependency injection, dependency inversion, and inversion of control (IoC).

http://www.dnrtv.com/default.aspx?showID=126


dnrTV

Wednesday, October 15, 2008 10:46:51 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Tuesday, October 14, 2008
RunAs Radio #79 - Michael Anderburg On What IT Pros Need to Know About Code Security!

 

RunAs Radio
Michael Anderburg On What IT Pros Need to Know About Code Security!

Michael Anderburg returns to talk to Richard and Greg about code security. Focused around the book The Security Development Lifecycle (http://www.microsoft.com/mspress/books/8753.aspx), Michael describes the role of IT in making code security work. While it sounds like a topic for developers, the book is equally applicable to IT Pros and what they can do to help development and even third-party applications be more secure.

http://www.runasradio.com/default.aspx?showNum=79


RunAs Radio

Tuesday, October 14, 2008 11:59:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [1]  | 


#  Friday, October 10, 2008
Hanselminutes #133 - Windows Live Agents and the Machine Translation Bot from MS Research

 

<Windows Live Agents and the Machine Translation Bot from MS Research/>

Scott visits Microsoft Research and talks to Helvecio Ribeiro, the Test Lead for Machine Translation about T-Bot, his translation bot for Windows Live Messenger.

http://hanselminutes.com/default.aspx?showID=151



Hanselminutes

Friday, October 10, 2008 2:09:56 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Thursday, October 09, 2008
.NET Rocks! #384 - Rob Tiffany on Windows Mobile

 

Rob Tiffany stops by to talk about the lastest in Windows Mobile technology. Carl managed to squeeze a hint out of him about what's next for Windows Mobility.
.NET Rocks!


dnr

Thursday, October 09, 2008 2:56:42 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Tuesday, October 07, 2008
RunAs Radio #78 - Wes Miller Enables Windows Rights Management Services!

 

RunAs Radio
Wes Miller Enables Windows Rights Management Services!

Richard and Greg bring back Wes Miller to talk about Windows Rights Management Services (RMS). RMS secures email and other Office documents to have precise security options, limiting the ability to view, print, copy and so on.

http://www.runasradio.com/default.aspx?showNum=78


RunAs Radio

Tuesday, October 07, 2008 9:30:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 

.NET Rocks! #383 - Jon Skeet on C# 3.0

 

Carl and Richard talk to author and developer Jon Skeet about his work with C# and Java at Google and elsewhere.
.NET Rocks!


dnr

Tuesday, October 07, 2008 7:06:56 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [1]  | 


#  Friday, October 03, 2008
Hanselminutes #132 - Subsonic with Rob Conery

 

<Subsonic with Rob Conery/>

What is Subsonic and should you use it? Scott and Rob Conery chat about his baby and comparisons to other Open Source frameworks. Also, Scott tries to get free consulting for his new pet project.

http://hanselminutes.com/default.aspx?showID=150



Hanselminutes

Friday, October 03, 2008 5:10:54 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 


#  Thursday, October 02, 2008
.NET Rocks! #382 - Andrew Delin on SOX Complience

 

Carl and Richard talk to Andrew Delin about why developers should care about the Sarbanes Oxley Act and why a compliance plan is in your best interest.
.NET Rocks!


dnr

Thursday, October 02, 2008 1:15:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
Comments [0]  | 




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