Are you ready for the Code Trip to come to Olympia? Jason Mauer is coming back to Olympia with a tour bus full of geeks. They'll be pulling up to the Thurston County Fairgrounds on Monday, April 14th. There will be giveaways, and great information on the newest technology from great presenters.
Have you been tracking the Code Trip? They started in Las Vegas at MIX08 on March 7th and headed north. The've made about 13 stops since then and Olympia will be the last one before arriving at the MVP Summit in Seattle
on Tuesday, April 15th. The capacity of our venue is 288, let's see how close we can get to that total, ok?
Jason will be sending us a list soon of the roster of geeks we'll see performing on the 14th. We're going to set up the Expo Hall so that multiple presentations can be happening at one time, to make the most of the time we have.
Other Code Trip events have featured talks on the newest technologies to emerge from MIX08, including Silverlight 2 Beta 1, Internet Explorer 8, SQL Server Data Services, Windows Live. Some attendees have been treated to talks on the technology powering the Code Trip, both online and on the bus. We'll update you as soon as we know what the recipe for the Olympia stop will be.
Tell your friends, drag your co-workers along, let's give the Code Trippers a big final event before they get back to the mothership.
For more on the Code Trip, including information on current and past events and where the Bus is now, see TheCodeTrip.com. You can see profiles of the Roadies -- people who have spent time in the bus. There's a behind the scenes section called 'Under the Hood' where you can get information on the technologies used on the Code Trip, the use of GPS information in tracking the route and current bus location and other
technical goodness being used to keep them in touch with the rest of the world. The Toolbox provides links to the tools used along the way to keep the Trip running smoothly.
The Travel Log is a blog contributed to by various people, mostly Jason Mauer and Tim Heuer. Video blogs, info on participants and events gets you right into the action. It certainly gets me fired up to see them in Olympia. Makes me more than a little envious really, getting to ride a tour bus full of state of the art equipment and full of other geeks
sounds like a lot of fun.
So, you coming or what? Put it on your calendar, invite some other folks and we'll see you there.
Monday, April 14th, 2008
6:30pm - 9:30pm
The Expo Hall at the Thurston County Fairgrounds
3054 Carpenter Rd SE
directions
He had a very important production roll-out to attend: the birth of his second daughter, Errin.
Here's a pic of the happy family
Congrats, Chris! We look forward to seeing you again once you start getting some sleep.
I'm jumping into the new MVC framework not just because it's shiny and new, but because it may be the next logical way to organize a reporting application I'm working on. I've just gotten started with ScottGu's tutorial series and also jumped into the example written up by Chris Tavares in the newest MSDN mag. I just downloaded the newest bits, so there are differences between the version I'm working with and the one(s) Scott and Chris based their examples on. There are a lot of blogs and sites with good info on MVC, but one that was particularly useful was the Microsoft page for ASP.NET MVC Preview 2 and ASP.NET Server Controls for Silverlight. The release notes are crucial for getting Chris' code altered so it'll run with the latest bits. Also useful are the comments on Scottgu's tutorial pages. Other devs are asking and answering questions that may be of use to you in getting that code to run.
I haven't gone all the way through Chris' MSDN sample yet, but the first problem I ran into was his example of altering the Route Table. And make sure you add the new route to the head of the list.
Here is my resource list so far:
Official ASP.NET page with info on MVC and Silverlight
http://www.asp.net/downloads/3.5-extensions/readme/Preview2.aspx#_Toc192423263
-- has differences between ASP.NET 3.5 Extensions Preview (released December 2007) and the current ASP.NET 3.5 released 3/6/2008, the MVC Framework Preview 2 and the previous CTP version, and differences between Silverlight versions.
releases, change notes and such to help correct sample code
ScottGu's series starts here
http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2007/11/13/asp-net-mvc-framework-part-1.aspx
del.icio.us links
http://del.icio.us/search/?setcount=100&all=aspnetmvc
Jeffrey Palermo's blog
http://codebetter.com/blogs/jeffrey.palermo/archive/tags/mvc/default.aspx
Brad Abrams example of MVC and Entity Framework