Toronto DevTeach WPF Presentation – what would be useful for you?
I’m in the lineup to speak at the DevTeach conference, which is taking place in Toronto from May 12-15. My presentation is going to be WPF-centric, but I have deliberately left the abstract flexible.
What would you like to hear about WPF at DevTeach from someone who’s been consulting in WPF and Silverlight?
Building a WPF business app end-to-end? WPF Top Tips? My notes and thoughts on collaborating with designers? Silverlight-WPF crossover?
What would be useful? I want this to be useful. Please let me know.
Legend of the Greasepole, Silverlight 2 Beta Edition
The Legend of the Greasepole is a game that began its life on July 1st, 1996, when a group of Engineering students from Queen’s University in Canada decided they’d create a way to re-live their unexplainable annual tradition from the comfort of their long-suffering computers.
The release of the Silverlight 2 Beta has allowed the game to goop its way to the web! In fact, here it is! (There are sound and fullscreen toggles in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Read the ‘cooks’ (lingo for student notes) for tips. Click mouse to perform actions, Shift to toggle tools, Space to do something silly (try it with beer).
Over the next few days, I’ll write more about how this was possible, and some of the many things I’ve learned about Silverlight development in the process.
For now, though, I’d love to hear how/if the game works for you!
If you didn’t study Engineering at Queen’s, the game isn’t going to make much sense. I mean, honestly, it hardly makes sense to me any more, and I’ve been to six real-life greasepole events myself.
Basically, the premise of the game is that the Frosh (first-year students), who are supposed to learn teamwork through the pole climb event, are a little too keen this year. So, as a thoughtful upper-year student, you need to gently stall the Frosh for as long as you can with whatever you can find as they attempt to (and ultimately do) wrest the tam from the top of the greasepole.
First one to 900 Achievement Points gets a pizza. Really… send me a screenshot and a mailing address.
Related Posts: [updated 30 Jul 08]
Silverlight Greasepole Game Engine Notes
Silverlight 2 Beta Performance
Off to Vegas!
Thanks to everyone who came out to my WPF and Silverlight presentation at the Toronto CodeCamp event yesterday. It was great to have a chance to speak with so many interested and enthusiastic people who hung around after the talk.
Because the presentation was a riff on my What’s New in WPF 3.5 and Silverlight talk from ObjectSharp’s Visual Studio 2008 at the Movies, if you’re looking for follow-up information, your best bet is this set of links.
(Bonus link: Rob Windsor (now “Channel 5.5″) interviewed some of us speakers at the pub and posted some follow-up video here.)
I’m off to the Mix08 conference in Las Vegas tomorrow! There should be very exciting news at Mix for .NET client-tier developers.
Vegas, here we come!
Continue ReadingUser Experience in Toronto and Las Vegas
I’m presenting at the Toronto Code Camp on Saturday about What’s new in Visual Studio 2008 for WPF 3.5 and Silverlight developers. My presentation will be an updated version of the presentation I gave at ObjectSharp’s Visual Studio 2008 At the Movies event, which hopefully you’ll find interesting and useful if you’re doing client-side development, whether on the web or for desktop apps.
The timing is ideal, because, well, let me join the phalanx of bloggers who are reporting that the Mix08 conference is taking place next week in Las Vegas. I’m excited to be attending Mix again this year, after previously enjoying Mix07 and Mix06.
Amid the excitement and curiosity about what’s coming at Mix are constrant reminders of the applicability of the WPF skillset to Silverlight 2 web development. (See, for example, Jesse Liberty’s suggestion for what eager would-be Silverlight 2 developers should do by way of training while waiting for the beta bits.)
If you’re attending Mix, grab thirteen23′s Mix08 Conference Agenda builder, an elegant WPF app that reminds you of just how many intriguing presentations you won’t be able to attend because they conflict with another equally intriguing presentation.
Thank goodness for webcasts and the 1.4x-speed playback option in Windows Media Player.
Continue Reading