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Microsoft Silverlight

April 21, 2007 by wroolie Leave a Comment

Microsoft this week announced the name for their WPF/E platform which should go live sometime in the coming months (I hope). WPF/E is a browser plugin which will allow for more dynamic XAML content to be displayed in a browser of any make. It’s often referred to as Microsoft’s “Flash Killer”.

The new name for the technology is Silverlight. The site is here.

I played around with this stuff last December. It’s all very cool. The problem at the moment is a lack of developer tools. Even using Microsoft Expressions or the Xaml designer in VS2005 won’t be much help, since the XAML that WPF/E allows is only a subset of all the tags. Still, it will allow web designers who already type markup to have much more dynamic content without the expensive Flash tools. You can code XAML in notepad or XAMLPad, and I’m sure there’ll be plenty of opensource designers to come out of this.

I know it’s Microsoft and they already have everything?but it would be nice to see this catch on. Macromedia (now Adobe) Flash was a difficult tool to use and prohibitively expensive. Even though .swf was a standard other tools could use, there was never a decent substitute to Flash. Now, the bar may be raised for all web apps?despite the stupid new name.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Leading Geeks

April 11, 2007 by wroolie Leave a Comment

I read this article last week called “How Not To Lead Geeks” and found it very funny and very true. It’s worth a quick read here, but the overall gist is that geeks are smarter than you are, so don’t try to treat them otherwise.

The one item on the list that struck me more than the others was number 4?”Use Management-Speak”.

In the last contract I held, I worked for someone who insisted on using management terms with me. I’ve read the books. I know the buzzwords. I’m not impressed. He insisted on using the word “leverage” at every opportunity. He was also partial to synergy. I don’t mind these words and you are not an idiot just for using them?they’re good words when used with proper flow. But when you make it a point of using them at every opportunity because it makes you sound smart, it really bothers me.

I get a lot of emails from companies for Overpass and a surprising amount of the emails use the word “synergise”?”perhaps our companies can find synergy”. I suppose I shouldn’t let it bother me as much as it does.

I knew a guy in the Army who also insisted on talking like a cop when he spoke to a group of people: “I then proceeded to enter the building where I witnessed two people in the process of conversing. . . ” But he spoke normally when talking with people one on one. Although he would never admit it, I think he thought he sounded smarter when he used all those unnecessary words to convey a simple meaning. That’s what the management guys do?they try to impress you (or, perhaps, gain control of your bi-lateral conversation) by using the management words.

By the way, if you can use the words “leverage”, “synergise”, and “paradigm” in the same sentence, you get to enter the Management Hall of Fame.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Full Bladder at Homebase

April 10, 2007 by wroolie Leave a Comment

There is a small retail park on the outskirts of Abingdon which has a Homebase, Argos, and a few other shops. A few weeks ago, while buying some things in Homebase to fix up the house, I found myself in a situation I always find myself in.

I had a trolley full of items, and one of my kids had to go to the bathroom?RIGHT NOW! We rush through the aisles to one of the tills?my boy dancing around behind me — and I ask the kids behind the counter if we can use the toilet. We get the typical response?”We don’t have toilets here, I’m afraid.”

“Where can we find the nearest toilet?” I ask?trying to convey my sense of urgency.

“There aren’t any in any of the other shops in this shopping centre. You have to cross the road and go over to Tesco”, he says. In other words, I have to abandon the trolley I’ve collected, rush the kids across the Homebase car park, cross a busy road with two traffic lights, cross the vast Tesco car park, and then try to find their toilet. And then, they assume I’ll return to Homebase to finish my shopping.

I can’t understand how a huge chain would spend so much money on purchasing products, setting up store space, and hiring staff and then keep me from making purchases because they don’t have a toilet.

But, or course they have a toilet. None of the kids working at Homebase are working with full bladders. They have a toilet, I just can’t use it.

And why? Why can’t I, as a lowly customer, use their toilet? Because someone somewhere fears I will piss on the seat!

Even if I did make a mess in their toilet and not clean it up (which I wouldn’t!), even if I urinated like I was doing it through a shower head, it would still make sense to hire someone to clean toilets once in a while than to lose business because they send everyone to Tesco. I’ve had jobs where cleaning toilets was occasionally called for. Everyone has to do it sometimes.

I would rant more about this, but I’ve got to go to the bathroom.

Filed Under: Bumblings

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