Tech Ed NZ 2008 Day 2
Thursday, September 4, 2008 at 10:14PM Ok so second day of Tech Ed and my brain is awash with new ideas and techniques i can apply to my everyday work.
Last night we had a great Blogger’s dinner, where I met with a number of the people who’s posts i read on a regular basis, such as Alex Henderson, Chakkaradeep. Must say a huge thank you to Darryl Burling for organising it also thanks to Scott Hanselman who came along and spoke to us about blogging and gave us a number of tips and fielded more than a few questions.
Web Futures Panel – Scott Hanselman, Jorke Odolphi, Harry Pierson, Jonas Follesø
The first session I got to today as the earlier sessions didn’t appeal. The session seemed to focus more on where we are at the moment, and while it’s interesting I actually don’t agree with the general opinion that what’s great about the web on devices such as the iPhone is the fact that sites just work. I love what Xero and kiwibank have done in realising that the situations where I’m using these devices are such that I don’t want to be burdened by the cruft that comes with the full web application instead I want a very distilled usable subsection of the application that’s usable while on the move. I found it a bit disappointing that no one trumpeted the cleanliness and usability that’s shining through with these new breeds of mobile sites.
Advanced Cross Browser Layout with Microsoft Internet Explorer 8 – Matt Hellar
This was the most disappointing of presentations, nothing much new here, but the slides were incomplete/out of date and the beta version of IE on the presenters laptop actually didn’t work as advertised, and didn’t pick up the EmulateIE8 tag that’s supposed to be the point of beta 2.
Pumping Iron – Dynamic Languages on .net – Harry Pierson
Harry did a great job of showing off the power of dynamic languages on .net, but I’m not as much a fan of Python (I find it scans worse than ruby) but as Harry is the IronPython guy, I understand why so many of his examples were in python, having said that a few too many of his examples were, “look at what I wrote” but that’s a minor thing. the IronPython and IronRuby ports look great, and looking forward to seeing the DLR drop.

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