# Thursday, March 29, 2007
Martin Shoemaker speaking at the West Michigan .NET User Group

Martin Shoemaker is speaking on April 17th at the West Michigan .NET User Group. His topic is Dee Jay: A voice-controlled Juke Box for Windows Vista. This is an application that Martin is working on. For those of you that don't know Martin, he is one of the greatest advocate for a lot of the new human interface technologoes that are coming our of Microsoft in the Ink and Voice areas. He is the creator of Tablet UML and a lot of other tools that work well on tablets. He has called me on many nights cursing the speach recognition engines in Windows XP. However, he's been absolutely thrilled with the voice recognition in Vista. I've actually heard that from a couple of different sources. It should be, as most of Martin's talks are, an entertaining talk with a lot of content. For a preview of some of the content, you should read Martin's posts on the subject here - http://www.tabletumlnews.com/speech_and_voice_(managed_sapi)/.

BTW: Martin also wrote these books.

 

Link to West Michigan .NET User Group

 


User Groups | User Groups
Thursday, March 29, 2007 2:32:47 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

# Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Kathy Sierra: Death threats against bloggers are NOT "protected speech"

Ever since I read Bill Wagner's post on the topic I've been sitting here in stunned silence not really knowing how to react. I guess it really does just take few bad apples to spoil it for everyone.

I truly hope that there is a resolution to this quickly and I pray that Kathy's voice is not lost forever. It's an amazing voice that can post on everything from Crash course in learning theory to Tech T-Shirts for Girls and every post is a gem.

Link to Creating Passionate Users: Death threats against bloggers are NOT "protected speech" (why I cancelled my ETech presentations)


Blogging
Tuesday, March 27, 2007 8:24:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

ArcReady: Mid-Tour Update

I'm in the middle of the ArcReady tour around the Heartland district (That's Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee). Tim Landgrave spoke in Detroit, MI yesterday and did a bangup job as always. It was fantastic to sit and soak in the knowledge that he has gained through the many years that he's been in business as a consultant on a tremendous number of different projects. He brings a lot of great stories and antidotes that we can all relate to from these varius projects. The only issue is that each of the presentation brings out slightly different sets of antidotes depending on the questions and audience reactions so really, I'd like to sit through all 11 of these rather than just 3 or 4 of them.

I got some questions about the presentation so I thought I'd answer some of them here. First, the names of the books that were referenced in the Patterns and Anti-Patterns section were:

 

Second question that I'm getting a lot is when and where can I get the presentation? We will be posting it on http://www.ArcReady.com as soon as the tour is over.

The question that I have for you is what topics/speakers would you like to see in the future for this series? Feel free to email me direct or leave answers in the comments.

 

Link to Microsoft ArcReady: Reinforcing the Foundations of Solutions Architecture

 


ArcReady | Design Patters | Architecture
Tuesday, March 27, 2007 5:10:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2] 

# Saturday, March 24, 2007
Windows Mobile 6 Upgrades for your phone

I get this question quite often - as do a lot of Microsoft folk. I can't answer it better than Gerardo Dada does on his blog here - Link to GerardoDada : Windows Mobile 6 Upgrades for your phone

I'm putting this on my blog because it's easier than remembering and typing in Gerardo's blog... :)


Mobile
Saturday, March 24, 2007 11:15:27 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

# Tuesday, March 13, 2007
My Favorite New Business Quote
In context of selling very exclusive high dollar items... "I'd rather sell the bricks for the Great Wall..." - Bill Gates, Chairman o= f Microsoft - 3/13/2007 at the MVP Summit."
Quotable
Tuesday, March 13, 2007 5:02:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

# Saturday, March 10, 2007
Attending the MVP Summit

I am very excited that I'm getting to go to the MVP Summit this year as an official blue badge. Last time I went it was as an MVP. It was a fantastic networking and learning event. Honestly it was one of the biggest perks of being an MVP - aside from working with Rafael Munoz and Michael Fosmire who were the MVP leads that really took care of me. The MVP Summit is a meeting of 2000 or so MVPs from all corners of the world and the product teams. There are things that we saw and provided feedback for 18 months ago that have just been released this year. With these two amazing groups of people at my disposal - my IM list exploded! Those contacts have been some of my closest friends and best business contacts. Any tech question that you might have in the Microsoft world - I probably have a contact that just knows the answer. It's amazing and it has always been a privilege to be considered among that elite group. I really can't even begin to name them all because I know that I'd forget someone but they range from ASP.NET guys to Mobility guys to Tablet guys to language guys.

Of course, now as an official Microsoft employee I'm coming to the MVP Summit representing the field Developer and Platform Evangelism team.

I'm looking forward to seeing a lot of my old friends and meeting new ones.

I'll see those that can make it at Party with Palermo!



Saturday, March 10, 2007 2:42:50 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1] 

# Friday, March 09, 2007
Best Assembly Instructions Ever

I can't believe that they actually put the word doodad in the instuctions! That's fun...

* Sent from a Windows Mobile 5 Device

BestAssemblyInstructions.jpg


Tangent
Friday, March 09, 2007 2:04:40 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

# Monday, January 15, 2007
What's the Default Answer?

Darrell Hawley said something very intrusting in a conference call one day that sparked a lot of thought on my end. We were trying to hash out a decision on a conference call and as a lot of group decisions go it was taking time. Darrell said, "Well let's pick the default answer and then if we have time to come back to the decision, we can maybe move off that default." I started thinking about "default answers" and it came to me how brilliant this is. Almost every question in life has a default answer. We just have to identify the default answer and see if it's palatable. If it is, then we can leave that question alone and focus on those where the default answer is not palatable. Once we answer those questions in a satisfactory way, then we can circle back to the default answers that were just palatable and improve the decisions there. That part alone is worth buying into because it does two things. 1) It frees us up to focus on the questions that we need to focus on rather than spending a ton of time fighting with decisions that we don't have to make anyway. 2) Just as importantly, it accelerates the decision making process.

You probably already employ this method to a degree. Think about your favorite restaurant. You probably have a favorite meal. Well - that's your default answer. When I'm in a hurry, I will just go with the default answer whenever I'm ordering food. When I've got lots of time, I'll read the menu and think through the possible answers and possibly choose something else.

Something that's very important to understand - the default doesn't have to be very good. You can review it and improve it. Continuing the dinner theme - the default answer for me at most restaurants is a burger with fries. Often, there are much better choices on the menu. However, I default to the burger a lot of times because of time or lack of focus on the menu or something.

Then I started thinking about those repeatable decisions and how we have to make them over and over and over and it burns a lot of cycles. The easy example is paying the mortgage. Is that a question - yes. Every month you have the decision to pay the mortgage and the default answer, if you don't decide one way or the other, is that the mortgage goes unpaid. Is that default answer acceptable? No but we are forced to make that decision over and over again. Among all of the other questions in our lives, it's another thing that we have keep on our mind and struggle with. The result of all of this thought is that I'm starting to look for ways that I can apply technology or process to start changing the default answers. This is different from the first part because moving off of the default takes action every time we answer the question whereas changing the default answer to something at least palatable means that you don't have to take action after that. Applied to the mortgage example changing the default involves setting up online bill pay or something in that vein. Once that's in place the default answer is that the mortgage gets paid and you have to take action to stop it. At that point it's a decision that make itself and you don't have to do anything which frees you up to focus on other things.

After I shared my thought process with Darrell, he posted the "Philosophy of If". He wants to break it down to code and write things in If statements. I don't think that it's that simple.

However, since Darrell is insisting on me codifying the solution - it would be in the form of database lookups. There's a table of questions and a table of possible answers with a link table between to put them together. Each question has a link to its default answer. Replacing the default requires identifying better answers, injecting them into the database and replacing the link. Writing the code in Ifs assumes that you have a set number of possible answers and that you have identified all of them.

The question table has the following fields:
ID
Question
AnswerNeedsReview

The link table has the following fields:
QuestionID
PossibleAnswerID
IsDefault
SortOrder

The PossibleAnswer table has the following fields:
ID
Answer
FirstAction -> nod to David Allen and "Getting Things Done" (Great book and process that everyone should read)

Any time that you find a new answer, you insert the answer and alter the AnswerNeedsReview to false. Once you have reviewed, sorted and set the default again, the decisions is just made until the next time that the AnswerNeedsReview somewhere.


Tangent
Monday, January 15, 2007 4:39:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1] 

# Sunday, January 07, 2007
Sharepoint Web Services For Remote Portlets (WSRP)

In conversation, someone brought up a Java WSRP implementation and I thought it was an interesting idea. Web Services for Remote Portlets (WSRP) is an Oasis standard defines a set of interfaces and behaviors that allow you to embed content from as web service on your page but more importantly, it allow that content to be interactive with the web service so it's more than just pulling the HTML. Clicks and other events funnel back to the origional site so that you don't have to write the backend processing for those controls. This is an interesting idea so I started looking into it.

I was thinking on what would be required to write one, but it turns out that I don't have to since there's already one on GotDotNet for Sharepoint. There you can find the WSRP Consumer Web Part Toolkit and the WSRP Producer Web Service Toolkit.

It's a facinating idea and I can see real possibilities with it. The question that I have is - has anyone used this yet? How well does it work?



Sunday, January 07, 2007 1:58:18 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]