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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Jobs Galore @ Infragistics

Are you passionate about the presentation layer?  Do you live and breathe for the perfect UI?  Are you a component junkie?  Are you a wordsmith for all things technical?  Do you love to write code?

If you anser YES to any of the above, and you are looking for a career at one of the hottest software companies in the world, take a look and see if anything interests you at http://www.infragistics.com/careers/openings.aspx#Openings.

Of course I am a little biased (I am the Chief Technical Evangelist, so I tend to get fired up about my job), but we are always looking for the best and brightest, so if you are looking for the next big opportunity in your career, check out Infragistics.

 

posted @ Tuesday, November 28, 2006 9:26 PM | Feedback (6) |

Thursday, November 02, 2006

JJulian says Introduce Baby Beres ...

No, she does not have a blog yet (I am sure Jeff will create one for her eventually), but Siena Riley Beres loves to read about .NET and XML and all the things her Dad just loves!

Check out the gallery ...

http://www.vbasp.net/photos/maingallery/category1006.aspx

 

posted @ Thursday, November 02, 2006 10:37 PM | Feedback (2) |

Blogging Again

So I am back to blogging ... but I am going to be posting different types of things in my site at http://www.vbasp.net.  I'll be talking about what I am doing in the community, for INETA, at Infragistics and other cool stuff.

posted @ Thursday, November 02, 2006 9:12 PM | Feedback (4) |

Portfolio Manager - Office 2007 Look & Feel

In the latest samples browser for NetAdvantage for ASP.NET, the Portfolio Manager samples have been updated with the Office 2007 Black and the Office 2007 Blue styles. Here are a few screen shots of what they look like ...

http://www.vbasp.net/blogs/jason_beres/archive/2006/11/02/9.aspx

posted @ Thursday, November 02, 2006 9:08 PM | Feedback (2) |

Friday, October 15, 2004

Code Converters

I get asked alot about converting code from C# to VB ...  below is a few converters that I know about.

1) Converter.zip - an VS.NET Add-In that converts code blocks or entire projects from C# to VB.NET

2) Reflector - a standalone app that will decompile from any langauge to another language (http://www.aisto.com/roeder/frontier/). 

3) http://authors.aspalliance.com/aldotnet/examples/translate.aspx.  Online converter form Alex Lowe, a Microsoft DE out of the great state of Michigan.

Do you know of any more?  Let me know!

posted @ Friday, October 15, 2004 6:07 PM | Feedback (17) |

Friday, September 17, 2004

n-Tier Apps and Bay.NET

Today was a 6 hour to San Francisco to speak at Bay.NET, Oliver Nguyen's INETA group.  This is a very well run group, all kinds of meetings, sub-groups, and cooperation with the entire development community in the Bay Area.  I spoke on n-Tier development and .NET, using all kinds of great technologies like application blocks, WS-Security and custom business objects.  To see the presenation live, you can check out the MSDN Webcast I did on “Constructing an n-Tier Windows Forms Application Using Microsoft Application Blocks“ or just download the Tracker application and the eBook on DevCenter.

posted @ Friday, September 17, 2004 3:23 AM | Feedback (1) |

Monday, September 13, 2004

Dinner with Nash

I am sitting here at the La Quinta Inn in Austin, TX watching Oprah.  It's “Back to School Makeovers” with Tyra Banks,  great stuff.  Anyway, tonight I speak at Scott Bellware's .NET User Group on ASP.NET Tips and Tricks, should be a great night. 

 

I was thinking about Friday night, when Sheri and I were at Chevy's having some great Mexican food.  Who walks in but John Nash, the luminary mathematician from Princeton University whom the movie “A Beautiful Mind” was based. I was too much of a wimp to get a picture with him, but it was such a cool sight.  The weekend before we watched all of the DVD extras for the movie A Beautiful Mind, so it was almost like I felt I knew the guy.

Living right next to Princeton University is pretty cool.  The campus is amazing (a couple pics below), and even though New Jersey gets a bad rap for alot of things, it is a heck of a place to live. 

posted @ Monday, September 13, 2004 5:44 PM | Feedback (5) |

Saturday, April 24, 2004

Imagine Cup Recap

My fellow INETA Academic Committee member Andrew Flick put his thoughts in writing about the Imagine Cup regional competitions held on March 17th at 4 locations in the USA. The 8 winners from the regionals compete at Tech-Ed for the USA Finals, with 1 winner representing the Stars and Stripes at the World Finals in Brazil in July. Andrew has some gripes (mostly gripes) about the way the regional competitions were run. I tend to agree with him on most of his points. Here are my thoughts about the regional logistics:

a) Not only was it long for the competitors to stand around waiting for the judges, it was pure hell standing for almost 7 straight hours for a judge. The schedule was so tight, we did not even eat lunch until 2:15pm. So we get there and 9:30am, and we are literally standing, with no breaks, until 2:15pm (the end of the first 10 competitors judging). Even at a user group meeting there is a 10 minute break every hour or so. There were so many competitors at Princeton (19 or 20), that we had to do that twice, since the room could only hold 10 competitors. So between 9:30am to 5:00pm, we had to stuff our face with the crappy food that was left over after everyone else ate (at noon of course), fill out our judging forms, with accurate scores and feedback, and act like we enjoyed _standing_ all day, all with a roughly 20 minute break between 2:10 and 2:30pm. The only positive thing ... the students had such awesome stuff that time did move pretty quick, there was really never a boring moment.  My suggestion:  Have each group present on stage, in front of other students. 

b) The students should leave with something. Something cool, like a jacket, backpack, Pocket PC, Spot Watch, or that level of coolness. Many of the groups at Princeton drove for 8 to 10 hours to get there. The guys from Cornell in NY not only had to drive that long, but they got a flat tire along the way. So imagine that, 4 engineers from Cornell stranded on the side of the NJ Turnpike looking at a flat tire, wondering what was next. I am glad I wasn't there. No to mention the guys from UMASS, Boston U, Virginia Commonwealth, schools from all over the Northeast, who either drove all night to get to Princeton, and woke up super early to make it there by 10am. As a judge, I felt like a real jack-ass telling these guys (at 10:30pm) what they needed to do to improve their apps for next year, then wishing them a safe 10 hour drive home as they lugged all their equipment back into their cars. If they all had a nice something to go back with, at least I would have felt better.

c) Rules need to be crystal clear. If you do not have an app to demo, don't show up. There were 3 groups at Princeton that did not have an app, just slides. In the 20 minute per presentation lifecycle, that is 1 hour saved from a 12 hour day of judging. That is a lot of time. The group from James Madison University, who won the Windows Challenge, had an amazing application; it was an adaptive algorithm that checked the contents of luggage at the airport for dangerous chemicals. They won the Windows Challenge. They did not come close in Imagine Cup. Sure, it was cool, but the whole app was an algorithm. The UI was very Spartan. The presentation, since they could not have the device that checks the contents of “air” at the competition, was more of a “imagine 2 people in 2 airports getting on a plane and ...” ... you see what I mean. There was nothing to actually see. The app was the algorithm. Needless to say, they were very upset when they lost. Here is a team that won the Windows Challenge, has meetings with government contractors about their algorithm, and even is doing a presentation for the Chief Scientist in the Office of the President. Not bad for some engineers from James Madison! But, here is the point .. why did they lose? I would guess the rules for the competition were not clear enough. Some ideas I have for rules -

  • App must be completing working and running on the equipment at the competition.
  • App cannot depend on Internet access at the competition to work Presentation can only have 5 slides max.
  • App must demonstrate the web services help page as well as the UI.
  • App must have a Windows Forms, ASP.NET, Tablet PC or Pocket PC UI.
  • App must be interesting and exciting. Algorithms belong in another contest.
  • App must have marketing, sales and development in the presentation.  Why you ask? Well, at the end of the day, the winning team is representing the entire US of A.  Against 20 or 30 other countries.  You better believe they would love nothing more to beat the USA in a programming contest!  We need to put the best of the best in front of the world judges for the 30 minutes they have.

d) Leave the pie-in-the-sky future additions out of the competition.  There should be no team in the finals based on what the app "could do". 

So that is my opinion.  Overall, I would grade the Imagine Cup a B-.  Next year, it will be an A.  I think Microsoft needs to promote it earlier to students.  I know INETA Academic needs to get judges and mentors for local competitions earlier.  I think the logistics was just a first time thing.  Next year, regionals will run smoother.  It was an awesome competition, and the stuff I saw was extremely impressive.  I am looking forward to Tech-Ed to see the USA finals.  It should be a great time.

 

posted @ Saturday, April 24, 2004 9:21 AM | Feedback (5) |

Friday, October 24, 2003

First Blog at PDC

This is my first blog!  Thanks to Jeff, the geek with the blogs, for getting all of this going.  I am looking forward to blogging useful and fun information about everything technology (and about me too, of course).

Jeff and I are at PDC, and in about 20 minutes we are heading to an academic meeting with Microsoft at the Bonavanture Hotel in sunny Los Angeles.  We'll update on that later.   Thanks again for setting me up Jeff!

posted @ Friday, October 24, 2003 8:30 AM | Feedback (4) |

Saturday, October 25, 2003

First Peek at Longhorn

Today at the MVP seminar I got my first look at Longhorn ... and all I can say is WOW, Awesome, Cool, Unreal.  This is going to be an awesome week of Longhorn, Whitbey and Yukon.  At the moment, I am too into the Marlins - Yankees game to think about much else right now.  Go Marlins!!!

posted @ Saturday, October 25, 2003 5:19 PM | Feedback (1) |

Wednesday, November 05, 2003

Success at Florida .NET

Ken Getz spoke at the user group last nite, and it was awesome.  The talk was on XML and DataSets, a topic that was chosen by the group.  Ken was in town for the Advisor-Access DevCon in Ft. Lauderdale, so it was awesome that he thought about speaking at the UG while he was here.  65 geeks in attendance, fun had by all!  Thanks to INETA for sponsoring another great community event!

posted @ Wednesday, November 05, 2003 9:25 AM | Feedback (2) |

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