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Archive for January, 2010
CodeMash 2.0.1.0.
Posted in: Programming by Steve on January 12, 2010
CodeMash is just around the corner and thanks to the good folks at telerik, I will be one of about 700 people attending the conference. I will be tweeting from the conference and posting recaps of sessions and happenings with an occasional picture or two. I might blog from the lazy river, who knows!
As of now, here is the list of sessions I would like to attend, along with backup sessions:
Thursday Sessions
9:45 AM: What Makes Ruby Different (Joe O’Brien, Mark Peabody & Leon Gersing) or Agile Iteration 0 (Ken Sipe)
11:00 AM: Maintainable ASP.NET MVC (Chris Patterson) or User Stories: Closing the Agile Look (Barry Hawkins)
1:45 PM: Ruby and Rails for the .NET Developer (Matt Yoho) or Seeing Constraints: Kanban Explained (Jon Stahl)
3:35 PM: Domain Driven Design: An Introduction (Barry Hawkins) or Refactoring the Programmer (Joe O’Brien)
4:45 PM: Testing ASP.NET Applications Using Ruby (Ben Hall)
Friday Sessions
9:30 AM: Software Design and Testability (Jeremy D. Miller) or Testing the Enterprise (Leon Gersing & Charlie Baker)
10:45 AM: 0-60 with Fluent NHibernate (Hudson Akridge) or Leadership 101 (Jim Holmes)
1:45 PM: IronPython with ASP.NET (Chris Sutton) OR Credit Crunch Code: Time to Pay Back the Technical Debt (Gary Short)
3:35 PM: Analyze and Optimize your .NET Web Application (James Avery) or SOLID Ruby (Jim Weirich)
This will be my first large conference. I’ve attended a few other conferences like the Iowa Code Camp and Chicago Code Camp. This will be a new experience for me and I hope that I will get a lot out of it. I am looking forward to meeting the people I follow on twitter too. This should be a great time.
See you in Sandusky!
Building out a new Laptop
Posted in: Programming by Steve on January 11, 2010
In March of 2009, I decided it was time to get a netbook. I wanted to have something that was portable and fast. I decided to go with the ASUS Eee PC 1000HE Blue Netbook. It was powerful enough to run Windows 7 Ultimate, SQL Server, Visual Studio 2008 and other development applications, making it very convenient to use on the road at customer locations. This laptop boasted a 9.5 hour battery, but I upgraded it to have 2 GB of memory and a 320 GB 7200 RPM hard drive. This lowered the time to about 6 hours, which was more than acceptable.
After using it for 9 months and trying to show videos and do more programming on it, the netbook route isn’t working for me. I need to have a laptop that is able to handle the load of video since my son, Conner, loves to watch the Muppets. I am looking to upgrade to a new laptop.
The first step is to clean house. I am what you would call a “pack rat”. I have all my old computer equipment and other miscellaneous electronics stored in my closet, stacked to the ceiling (my wife can attest to this). With all the stuff I have, I couldn’t possibly use it all, so I am selling it on eBay.
The second step is to determine which laptop to purchase. Here are my requirements for the laptop:
Core i7 CPU - 4GB RAM
- Discrete graphics card
- Between 12” and 15.5” High Resolution LED screen
- Bluetooth
- capable of handling an Intel X25-M SSD upgraded hard drive
- 3 year warranty
- no more than $1,700
- 0% financing for at least 6 months
ASIDE: Originally, I was looking to purchase a MacBook Pro, but since the refresh hasn’t happened and I’m well invested in the Windows environment (.NET, Windows Home Server, gaming, knowledge), I am not looking into one currently. Maybe in the future I’ll investigate a Apple, but for now, I’m sticking to Windows laptops.
I’m still investigating the best choice from these:
Right now, the Dell seems to be winning on pricing point at $1,500 with tax and shipping and 9 months of 0% financing with the following load out:
- Intel® Core™ i7-720QM Quad Core Processor @ 1.6GHz (2.8GHz Turbo Mode, 6MB Cache)
- 3 Year Basic Service Plan
- 15.6” Full High Definition (1080p) High Brightness LED Display with TrueLife™ and Camera
- 4GB Shared Dual Channel DDR3 at 1333MHz
- 320GB SATA Hard Drive (7200RPM)
- 512MB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570
- 8X Slot Load CD/DVD Burner (Dual Layer DVD+/-R Drive)
- 85 Whr Lithium Ion Battery (9 cell)
- Intel 5300 Ultimate-N Half Mini Card (3×3) with MyWiFi
- Dell Wireless 365 Bluetooth Internal (2.1)
- Back-lit Keyboard
With this load out, I can do all my development and show videos to Conner (like this one, his favorite) without any problems.
The HP Envy comes out closer to $1,700 with a 3 year warranty and only 6 months of 0%. It’s too bad the HP Envy 13 doesn’t come with a Core i7 CPU because that would be the perfect replacement for my netbook. I’m wondering if I should just get the Envy 13 since the processor is still such a better upgrade to what I have now. I did see one of these at Fry’s the other day and it definitely is one sweet laptop.
The Asus is out of stock and I haven’t seen one in person to make an informed decision on this one.
I will update on any further information or if a purchase is made. If you have any other thoughts or ideas for me, please feel free to comment.
Xbox Live
Posted in: Shopping by Steve on January 6, 2010
So after owning my Xbox for almost 2 years, I finally got a RROD. Unfortunately, it was out of warranty. I thought I was completely screwed, but for this specific failure, they extended the warranty to 3 years. Lucky me!
So after I sent it away, I saw that Amazon is offering a subscription to Xbox Live for $34.99 – pretty decent price for a year of Gold online gaming, especially since I’m playing Modern Warfare 2 a lot.
Amazon.com – Xbox 360 Live Subscription Gold Card