# Tuesday, June 16, 2009

I just saw that the call for speakers is open for the fall Utah Code Camp. The code camp will be on September 19. The website lists a bunch of speakers (I think they are the speakers from last year) and gives you an idea of the kind of speakers and topics that can be covered. I know that Pat is always looking for new speakers and new ideas. If you have experience in anything from a basic presentation up through the latest and greatest features of some product I am sure we would all love to hear about it.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009 2:53:00 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Friday, June 05, 2009

Today there were many pieces of good news for the Apache Stonehenge project. I have been working on the project for the last few months. There has been a lot of work (mostly by others) to make sure that we have a good quality release. The first is that we have released the M1 milestone that shows interoperability between PHP, Java, and .NET implementations of the application. You can mix and match the different front ends, business processing services, and order processing services as you want. I will paste the announcement below for those who are interested.

The second piece of good news was that the Stonehenge project was a large part of the demo given during the keynote at the Java One conference today. Greg Leake from Microsoft and Harold Carr from Sun demonstrated Stonehenge working with a Java implementation created by Sun.

The third piece of good news was that Sun donated their implementation of the Stocktrader application to the Apache Stonehenge project. Now there are multiple Java implementations.

Since the whole purpose of the Stonehenge project is to show interoperability between different web service stacks I would love to see other vendors such as BEA (Oracle) and IBM also contribute solutions. For many years we have been talking about how standards will help the industry with interoperability. The Apache Stonehenge project is showing concrete proof of how that works and better yet with the code and configuration files available anyone can examine how it was done and duplicate it in their mixed environment.

As promised earlier here is the text from the announcement of the Stonehenge M1 milestone.

We are pleased to announce the release of Apache Stonehenge
(incubator) version M1.
You can download this release from
http://incubator.apache.org/stonehenge/download.html
http://www.apache.org/dyn/closer.cgi/incubator/stonehenge

Apache Stonehenge is a set of example applications for Service
Oriented Architecture
that spans languages and platforms and demonstrates best practise and
interoperability.
The aim of the Stonehenge project is to develop a set of sample applications to
demonstrate seamless interoperability across multiple underlying
platform technologies
by using currently defined W3C and OASIS standard protocols. By having
a set of sample
applications, with multiple language and framework implementations
will become a useful
and important part of the SOA landscape. It will:

* illustrate and develop best practice for interoperable
applications that communicate
via distributed protocols,
* demonstrate interoperability between platforms,
* provide sample code upon which SOA developers can build,
* help identify interoperability issues and their solutions, and
* build confidence in cross-platform deployment of SOA technologies.

Disclaimer: Apache Stonehenge is an effort undergoing incubation at
the Apache Software
Foundation (ASF), sponsored by the Apache Incubator PMC. Incubation is
required of all newly accepted projects until a further review
indicates that the infrastructure, communications, and decision making
process have stabilized in a manner consistent with other successful
ASF projects. While incubation status is not necessarily a reflection
of the completeness
or stability of the code, it does indicate that the project has yet to
be fully endorsed by the ASF.

Apache Stonehenge web site is at
http://incubator.apache.org/stonehenge/

Issues can be reported here.
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/STONEHENGE

We welcome your early feedback.
Thank you for your interest in Apache Stonehenge

--Apache Stonehenge Team--
http://incubator.apache.org/stonehenge/
Friday, June 05, 2009 3:36:00 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Wednesday, June 03, 2009

By now you have probably heard of bing. It is the next incarnation of Microsoft’s search engine. It is still in preview mode but www.live.com redirects to it so if you are using Microsoft as your search provider you will use it.

I want to start by commenting on the name. I have heard a lot of comments about how good or bad the name is. One of the first comments was along the lines of “it will be easier to say bing for it than live search for it”. For me the first thing I thought of was the sound that you hear in a game show when someone gets the correct answer. There is probably a formal name for the sound but to me it sounds like “bing” so every time I see the name in the search engine I associate it with the correct answer.

The other big question is if the search engine is better than live search and if it is good enough to use instead of Google. I have been using live search for a few years and have only had to go to Google a few times to get answers that I couldn’t find with live search. Granted on some occasions when I did compare results I would find that for some terms live search ranked the result I wanted higher, sometimes Google did. I didn’t keep a complete list and haven’t done any impartial comparisons but I didn’t see a discernable pattern in the results. In the last few days while I have been using bing I have felt that the results were better and there are some really cool features like how bing pulls out information you might need. If you search on “Radio Stations in NYC” you see a map and links to web pages for the different radio stations. Below that are the “normal” search results. Unfortunately searching for “Radio Stations in SLC” doesn’t give you the map and links to the stations. I am not sure why the abbreviation doesn’t work but spelling out Salt Lake City gives results formatted similar to NYC.

I was pointed to the site www.mysearchoff.com today. That web site brings up results from bing, Google, and Yahoo. I tried some phrases there and some that are usually tricky for search engines like “rulers lying in state” where there are many words that have multiple meanings and could confuse the search engine. Bing appeared to return very similar results as the other two search engines. I then searched on the name of someone in my junk e-mail folder. The name is Camara. As I expected all 3 search engines suggested that perhaps I meant to search for camera. Bing and Google had the same first page linking to information about the scam. Yahoo had the same page lower down in the rankings. Of course other search terms will have different rankings so declaring a search engine a winner after just a few searches is silly. My completely unscientific view is that bing is better than live and will help me find information better. I look forward to using some of its other features previewed at www.decisionengine.com like finding the lowest airfare and getting answers to health questions.

Wednesday, June 03, 2009 3:49:00 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, June 01, 2009

The title of my blog post is the same as a article from Darryl Taft at eweek. In the article (in the form of a slideshow) we see a list of people, products, and technologies that make Microsoft important to the developer. I agree with all of them. Things like having Bill Gates and Steve Balmer support developers, tools like Visual Studio and Team Foundation Server, and technologies like web services and AJAX really do provide a lot of compelling reasons to want to develop on the Microsoft platform.

I also feel from a historical sense that the reason not to develop on the Microsoft platform has some merit. In the past Microsoft has not shown a great commitment to supporting many different platforms. Some of the reason is competitive and others are economical. To be certain, Microsoft is not unique in this as other companies have removed support for an OS or CPU architecture and not been branded as being untrustworthy, but for some reason if Microsoft stops supporting RISC chips it is to help Intel and not because there are fewer and fewer RISC machines being sold. I see that attitude changing now. The change is slow in some areas (I don’t expect to see Windows open sourced any time soon) but in others like the web where you can get the source code for some of the offerings there is a strong commitment to allow customers to use the products regardless of the support provided by Microsoft.

Another area is in interoperability. As part of the work I am doing now I have been asked by Microsoft to go back and update a slide deck to point out the different places where Microsoft is able to interoperate with other platforms. I also am volunteering time with the Apache Stonehenge project. The goal of the project is to show WS-* interoperability between different web service stacks. We have just completed voting on the M1 release and are discussing M2. There is a lot of excitement and energy on making sure that there is interoperability and that anyone can download the code and see the interoperability happening. There are other areas like information cards and the work being done around identity where making sure that interoperability happens because without interoperability it doesn’t do any good for anyone.

Microsoft has done a lot better at working with standards bodies and making sure that they are implementing standards as they are developed without proprietary extensions to the standards. Microsoft has a touch position in that they want to innovate and be able to compete in the marketplace but at the same time they need to support standards and be the same as everyone else so their products can be used. I think in the end having all products be open source is not the ultimate answer but having some examples of how to interoperate will go a long way to making sure that everything works well together.

Monday, June 01, 2009 4:24:00 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
# Thursday, May 28, 2009

There are lots of good things on the Internet and some that are not so good. I don’t want to infringe on someone else’s free speech but I also don’t think that means I have to read or see everything that is put on the Internet. Also I have children and I believe that there is a lot of content that is not appropriate for them. As such I have used filtering software for a long time. Earlier this year I upgraded to 64-bit operating systems on some of my machines and the software I had been using wouldn’t run so I asked around for other suggestions on what software others use to filter content. I settled on using Windows Live Family Safety (mainly because it is free and runs on 64-bit Vista). It has been working fine for me and my family until last week.

For some strange reason I started getting error 80210079 when trying to approve web sites for myself or for all users. I went through the normal dance of trying to search for information, repair the installation, and remove and install the Windows Live Essentials software. All to no avail. I couldn’t find anything on support.microsoft.com or by using several search engines. I decided to blog about it just in case someone else is getting the same error.

I have my personal settings set as strict at my youngest child just so I am not a hypocrite and asking them to go through something that I am not willing to do also. I also have other Live IDs so I changed the logged in user for the family safety filter and the error went away. I dug a little deeper and figured out that because I was essentially white listing all of the web sites I visit I had 500 approved sites on my primary Live ID and fewer (around 70) on the one that wasn’t giving me error 80210079. I tried deleting a few sites from my primary account and it stopped giving me the error when I approved new sites. I deleted a lot of sites that I don’t regularly visit.

It appears that Windows Live Family Safety has a limit of 500 sites in the approved list. This isn’t a problem for my children since they seem to go to the same sites (less than 100) most of the time but I will have to remember this when I get back up to the magic 500 number.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009 11:28:00 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Tuesday, May 26, 2009

I have a list of resources to help you learn more about .NET 4 and Visual Studio 2010. You can check these out and find out more about the beta release.

I am sure there are other resources that are available. A good place to check for additional information is your local user group. The INETA web site has information about user groups around the world. The members of the user group all have different experiences and areas of focus so it is likely that you will find someone with answers to your questions or that you can answer others’ questions.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009 3:21:00 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, May 18, 2009

Today Microsoft released beta 1 of .NET 4 and Visual Studio 2010 to MSDN. You can read a little bit about it on Somasegar’s blog. I also wrote a short article on the highlights of .NET 4 and it is posted on MSDN here. There has been a lot of work put into the products and a lot written about the new features. I am excited to see the new bindings in WCF and see how much easier it will make developing simple services. There are some other things I would like to play with like the WF integration and after watching some cool demos of XAML based workflow services I would like to see some of them in action. There will be plenty of things to keep me busy for the next few weeks and months.

Monday, May 18, 2009 8:45:00 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Thursday, May 14, 2009

I have Live Search (www.live.com) set as my home page in IE8. I like that it is small and most often if I am opening the web browser it is to search for something. I just opened a new browser and saw that my home page was redirected to the kumo beta search engine (www.kumo.com). I haven’t done more than a couple of searches and so I don’t have a complete review of the results but it looks like the same results as before with a new UI. I really like the new link on search results to mark the result as spam. I am not sure what it does but I did go out and do a vanity search to remove a certain site that has always been about 8 or 9 in the rankings and always tries to download something. I was impressed to find that particular site doesn’t show up any more in the results (at least not in the top 50). I am happy for that improvement if nothing else.

Note: I have not been able to duplicate this experience after rebooting my machine. I will keep looking for the public release of kumo.com but for now it just returns a blank page to me.

Thursday, May 14, 2009 7:15:00 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |