Category Archives: Developer Events

DDD4 – Call For Speakers

Would you like to speak at one of the UK’s leading developer community events?

We’re looking for community-oriented folks to speak at DeveloperDeveloperDeveloper 4 (2nd December 2006)!

Please take a look at the submissions so far, then feel free to submit your own session!

If you are sitting on the fence or have not spoken to an audience before, fear not! DDD is a friendly place, you will be made most welcome!

As usual, the event will be held at Microsoft’s Reading Campus in Thames Valley Park.

Check out what I’ve said about previous DDD days here, here and here!

NRW06 – Going Home…

Returning to the UK was not as trouble-free as the journey to Dusseldorf. The situation I am about to describe was exacerbated by the fact I had enjoyed a lot of beer – we drank small beers until 0400, which meant we had only a few hours of sleep before breakfast finished! Fortunately, hunger was not a issue as we found ourselves in a McDonalds at 0100. Like Tenerife, there’s at least one thing on the McDonald’s menu that we don’t’ get here in the UK…I had a bacon jalapeno big mac thing – it was wicked, the jalapenos really set it apart from the tastelessness of big macs in the UK.

I travelled by British Airways so I enjoyed the benefits on on-line check-in, 24 hours before departure. I was able to choose my seats and print my boarding passes at home. Luckily, the Dusseldorf IBIS hotel that I was staying in offered free Internet access. So, after the conference and after copious quantities of beer, I made sense of the German keyboard and printed some board passes for my return journey. That was at around about 0105 on Friday 28th. At 0242, British Airways “eService” sent me a text message advising me that flight from Dusseldorf to London Heathrow had been cancelled. British Airways were pretty good and got me booked on a later flight to Heathrow and managed to change my “unchangeable” ticket such that British Midland would take me from Heathrow to Edinburgh. Anyway, I suppose it was good of them to send me a text message, albeit I did not receive it until 1100.

Killing time at Dusseldorf Airport
So, I had five hours to kill in Dusseldorf Airport. I could have jumped on a train back to Dusseldorf and taken some time over a few of the sites, however the weather was looking threatening (visions of angry clouds waving fists at us springs to mind). I chose to stay in the airport, there are plenty of shops, it wasn’t too hard to kill a couple of hours window shopping. Some of the remaining time was spent just people watching and typing up the text of a few blog entries. Which reminds me, I must get myself an offline blogging tool such as BlogJet or w.Bloggar (as recommended by Scott Hanselman over here.) Of course, I also had my generic MP3 player loaded with tunes – the DJ, Andy Kafouros, at the after-show party last night played Juanes, which happens to be on my playlist. As it happens, I’m also listening to Summer Holiday Hits which contains a great selection of late 80’s and early 90’s tunes that take me back to Malta: tunes like Culture Beat’s Mr Vain, Laura Branigan’s Self Control, Balitimore’s Tarzan Boy (yes, for real, that was a super summer tune) and the epic Life is Life by Opus.

Baggage on another airplane
My baggage did not follow me home. It decided to get on the British Midland flight that left Heathrow after mine. No major problem, I can live without a bag of laundry! The bag was couriered to me on Saturday…annoyingly one of the compartments had been opened and the contents had vanished. Whilst the item that is missing is of little monetary value, it would be nice to get it back – it was the lanyard for my first international conference.

Downloads
Slide deck and simple product backlog, don’t forget the movie!
Code/Demonstrations, including my crib notes.
TDD and Code Coverage – the slide deck.

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NRW06 – Conference Day

Today saw me deliver two sessions at The Community Conference NRW06 in Dusseldorf. Originally, I was only delivering one session: Test-Driven Development (and Code Coverage). Knowing that speakers occasionally have to cancel or pull out, I offered a second session to cover this eventuality – that session was a re-run of my Managing Iterative Development Using Scrum presentation. The Scrum session enjoyed full attendance – my room was full. The TDD session also enjoyed a large turnout – it was in the keynote speech “halle” so there were some empty seats. I didn’t perform a head count, but I reckon I had 35-40 attendees in both sessions. Not a bad result, although I say so myself. I must have done something right, praise for both sessions from Vinzenz can be found here! Vinzenz danke.

Apart from meeting Dan again (Dan has spoken at DDD community events in the past), I was able to catch up with is stage partner Michael Willers. But where was Christian Weyer? Christian promised me an Indigo t-shirt when he came to Scotland in July 2005…did he cancel his appearance because I was on the same agenda? Had I come to Dusseldorf to “get him”? Had the image of a mad kilt wearing Scotsman put fear in to the heart of Christian?

Speakers were given these rather cool polo shirts to wear:

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I particularly liked what was printed on the back of the polo shirts:

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Oliver Sturm and Stephan Oetzel

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A roadie waits to be let it…yes, he is wearing a Metallica t-shirt!

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Weather was good – we sat outside

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Caption contest for the gentleman with the black t-shirt in the middle?
— “The invisible beer bottle?”

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Crowd scenes – room 4 was packed

Stephan writes about NRW06 over here whilst announcing the existence of NRW06 – The Movie!

I will post the slides and code in the next blog entry in a few hours time – the demonstrations have a crib sheet, so you should be able to replicate them.

One thing this event confirmed for me, if you want to learn a language, live the language, immerse yourself in the country that speaks the language.

Community Rocks!

NRW07 promises to be a good one!

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On the way to NRW06

On Thursday 27th July, I delivered two sessions at The Community Conference NRW06 in Dusseldorf. The travel started today!

This was my first visit to Germany, I was lucky enough to have a trouble-free journey to Dusseldorf: Edinburgh to London Heathrow then on to Dusseldorf. There was a little excitement on the runway at Edinburgh Airport. We taxied out to the runway and stopped at right-angles to the runway itself – if we looked left and right we could see the entire length of the runway. The captain announced a brief delay and hinted that we should look out to the left of the aircraft…where we saw a couple of military jets bobbing their way through the skies. The captain went on to tell us that they were “low on fuel”.

Arrival in Dusseldorf was remarkably similar to my previous ventures to mainland Europe, most notably Vienna and Amsterdam. The efficiency of the German railway system was obvious from the moment I set foot on the platform. Vandalism of trains in Europe seems to be kept to a minimum, perhaps this is because the Europeans keep their trains moving as much as possible, a trick that we should pay credence to here in UK. And what about the prices? I paid 2€ each way for a 10 minute train ride from Dusseldorf airport to Dusseldorf HBF. How much did I pay to get from Inverkeithing to Edinburgh Airport? £4.50, each way…nearly a tenner.

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I enjoyed dinner and drinks with Dan (aka Lennybacon). We drank “alt” beer, brewed locally. No pints were available, instead, beer was delivered in small glasses. An attentive barman ensured our thirsts were quenched, as soon as our glasses were nearly empty, he brought over two more small glasses. A nice trick, the beer was always cold – think about the latter (bottom) half of a pint, it’s starting to warm up. And small glasses mean we actually drank less – “just one more pint” often brings with it an excess of liquid!

Dusseldorf sits on the river Rhine. I was fortunate enough to be given a very brief tour of the Altstadt (Old town including the river front) by the NRW06 conference host, Lenny Bacon. They’ve done a super job making the river front a social hub. There’s even a fake beach, with sand! In the distance we could the cranes dismantling what was one of Europe’s largest roller-coasters. This was a shame as I do like roller-coasters and would have been “up for it”.

Anyway, we had a reasonably early night – as mentioned earlier in this post, Dan had informed me that I was now presenting two session! Sleep was in order!

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TDD, Code Coverage, .net debugging, tracing and instrumentation

The £10 early bird period for this Scottish Developers event runs until the 15th of July – from that date, the cost rises to £25.

There are still a handful of places available, if you’d like to see two Microsoft MVPs talk’n’code about TDD, Code Coverage, .net debugging, tracing and instrumentation and save £15 at the same time, book now!

If you’d like a chance to win a copy of JetBrains’ dotTrace code profiler, be there!

And one lucky person will take home a copy of ReSharper!

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NxtGenUG podcast 3

NxtGenUG podcast no.3 is now available.

Show #3 – The one with added security Saturday, July 01, 2006
Episode 3 – Dave turns up late, Rich reveals his secret Halo 2 gaming style, gets his knuckles rapped over security and Dave mentions his trip to Office DevCon. Featuring Steve Lamb on Security and TechnoTotty solves another problem.

Featuring: Steve Lamb on security

Dave and Rich chat with Steve Lamb, ITPro evangelist at Microsoft and self-confessed security geek. Dave may be shot and Rich gets a security rap on the knuckles. [Transcript]

Steve Lamb is an IT Pro Evangelist for Microsoft,UK, specialising in Security Technologies. For the Past 11yrs, he has worked solely as a security professional and during this time architected and implemented technical solutions for many FTSE 100 companies throughout Europe the Middle East and Africa. In addition Steve has worked with the military and governments of various countries.

Steve is well known on in the security community for the entertaining way he approaches a serious subject and most importantly, the impact he has in enabling people to do more with less risk. Security is not just about technology and can be far more complex however, Steve’s specialty is translating “Rocket Science” (deep technical) into Common Sense advice. His favourite topics are combating Malware, embracing PKI and Cryptography in general, Secure wireless networking and strategies for user awareness and dealing with social engineering.

Outside work Steve is a keen Freestyle Windsurfer, Teaches White Water Kayaking and occasionally gets to rip on a Snowboard – more often he wipes out!

NRW06 – Developer Community Conference

I am pleased to announce that not only will I be attending NRW06 on the 27th of July 2006, but I’ll also be speaking!

I’ll be talking about test-driven development and code coverage – pretty much the same session that I am delivering to Scottish Developers a week later.

Here’s an outline of what I’ll be covering:

Code Coverage in .NET

Testing code can be a laborious process that is repetitive in its nature. Empirical evidence confirms that most repetitive processes enjoy a lot of success, or coverage, during early iterations, but later iterations suffer from lower coverage as the tedium sets in. For that reason, we sought to automate the repetitive testing process, i.e. we wrote some code that could replace the repetitive process. The development community achieved this by the adoption of a testing framework that embraced Test-Driven Development (TDD) and testing tools such as NUnit.

The ethos behind TDD and NUnit is “write once, use often”, i.e. once a test has been written it can be used many times. Naturally, by embodying “tests” in code and by using a tool to run those tests, we find the repetitive nature of testing disappears and the process of testing actually beings to provide confidence boosts.

However, whilst adoption of TDD and NUnit provides major advances in the reduction of repetitive testing tasks, they do not help us ensure that the tests actually cover as much of the code-base as is possible/required. It is possible to write a collection of tests that only exercise 25% of the code-base, yet because the tests are successful (i.e. they pass), the developer’s confidence is so high, s/he fails to spot that there is still a lot of test code still to be written.

Code coverage, is not a new technique, the likes of Boris Bezier discussed it in 1990 and Tom McCabe wrote about it as far back as 1976. Today, we can use graphical tools to determine how much of our code is exercised, or covered during an execution cycle. Such tools help us identify which areas of our code have not been tested and can help us direct our effort. However, they do rely on some manual effort that is repetitive, i.e. a user/developer must walk through the application. Luckily, if we are practicing TDD, we have a set of automated tests that we can tap into thus alleviate this repetition.

Over the course of 90 minutes Craig will demonstrate four .net tools, NUnit, NCover, NCoverExplorer and TestDriven.Net. All of these tools are free (or very cheap for commercial use) and work with .net 1.1 and 2.0. A variety of IDEs are supported, include Visual Studio 2003 and Visual Studio 2005. He will explain the basics of TDD and code coverage and why they are both important skills and processes to include in your development/build process. Examples will be written in C# and Visual Studio 2005.

And I intend to wear a Metallica t-shirt at the after show party 🙂 Why? Well, attend NRW06 and catch up with conference organiser, Daniel Fisher (aka DDD2 and DDD3 speaker lennybacon) and you’ll see why!

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NxtGenUG Podcasts…

Richard Costall and Dave McMahon, have released their second podcast.

If you want to hear all about TechnoTotty, England’s football players, sock puppets, DeveloperDeveloperDeveloper, cheesy catchy phrases, or Richard’s experience with SatNav (Richard, please read this!) then it’s worth downloading their podcasts. If that doesn’t float your boat, download it anyway because Microsoft’s very own Mike Taulty talks to Richard and Dave about the Microsoft Windows Communication Foundation (WCF). There’s a full transcript of the interview with Mike available here.

To me, to you…Richard and Dave?

View all the NxtGenUG podcasts here.

Next Scottish Developers event – 3rd August – not to be missed!

.ics calendar entry

Scottish Developers is proud to announce an August half day conference event not to be missed. The place to be is Edinburgh on the 3rd of August 2006 if you have an interest in debugging or code coverage…

AGENDA

13:45 Registration

14:00 Welcome & introductions

14:10 .NET debugging, tracing and instrumentation – Duncan Jones of Merrion Computing

15:40 Break – free beer and pizza anyone!

16:15 Code Coverage in .NET – Craig Murphy of Scottish Developers

18:00 Close (post event entertainment of our speakers in the traditional way)

.NET debugging, tracing and instrumentation

ABSTRACT
In this session we will walk through the built in capabilities of the .NET framework and other tools that provide debugging, tracing and instrumentation for .NET developers. Code examples (in VB.Net) will be included and there will be some statistical analysis on the costs of adding different levels of tracing to your application.”

Sections:
+ The need for debugging, tracing and instrumentation
+ Using the Trace and Debug classes
+ Setting a trace level using a trace switch
+ Writing a custom trace listener
+ The built in .NET performance counters
+ Creating and using custom performance counters
+ The cost of different tracing and instrumentation levels

BIO
Duncan Jones is a Microsoft MVP in Visual Basic.NET and since 2001, the technical half of Merrion Computing Ltd, a company that provides printer monitoring solutions for Microsoft Windows based networks. He has been programming in Basic for over half of his life starting out on the Sinclair ZX-81 and BBC Micro and has used nearly every variant of Microsoft Visual Basic. He has been developing software commercially since graduating from Aston University in 1993 – originally in Birmingham, then Nottingham and for the last 8 years in sunny Dublin. He has published 19 article on Code Project and is currently traversing the North face of the Visual Basic .NET learning curve.

Outside of IT his interests are photography, single malt whisky and the never ending restoration of a 1971 Triumph GT6

Code Coverage in .NET

ABSTRACT
Testing code can be a laborious process that is repetitive in its nature. Empirical evidence confirms that most repetitive processes enjoy a lot of success, or coverage, during early iterations, but later iterations suffer from lower coverage as the tedium sets in. For that reason, we sought to automate the repetitive testing process, i.e. we wrote some code that could replace the repetitive process. The development community achieved this by the adoption of a testing framework that embraced Test-Driven Development (TDD) and testing tools such as NUnit.

The ethos behind TDD and NUnit is “write once, use often”, i.e. once a test has been written it can be used many times. Naturally, by embodying “tests” in code and by using a tool to run those tests, we find the repetitive nature of testing disappears and the process of testing actually beings to provide confidence boosts.

However, whilst adoption of TDD and NUnit provides major advances in the reduction of repetitive testing tasks, they do not help us ensure that the tests actually cover as much of the code-base as is possible/required. It is possible to write a collection of tests that only exercise 25% of the code-base, yet because the tests are successful (i.e. they pass), the developer’s confidence is so high, s/he fails to spot that there is still a lot of test code still to be written.

Code coverage, is not a new technique, the likes of Boris Bezier discussed it in 1990 and Tom McCabe wrote about it as far back as 1976. Today, we can use graphical tools to determine how much of our code is exercised, or covered during an execution cycle. Such tools help us identify which areas of our code have not been tested and can help us direct our effort. However, they do rely on some manual effort that is repetitive, i.e. a user/developer must walk through the application. Luckily, if we are practicing TDD, we have a set of automated tests that we can tap into thus alleviate this repetition.

Over the course of 90 minutes Craig will demonstrate four .net tools, NUnit, NCover, NCoverExplorer and TestDriven.Net. All of these tools and free and work with .net 1.1 and 2.0. A variety of IDEs are supported, include Visual Studio 2003 and Visual Studio 2005. He will explain the basics of TDD and code coverage and why they are both important skills and processes to include in your development/build process. Examples will be written in C# and Visual Studio 2005.

BIO
Craig Murphy is an author, developer, speaker, project manager, Microsoft MVP (Connected Systems) and is a Certified ScrumMaster. Commercially, Craig has been using Borland Delphi since 1998; today, he uses Visual Studio 2005 and C#. He regularly writes articles product/book reviews: The Delphi Magazine, International Developer, ASPToday and Computer Headline have published his work. Craig has written for virtually every Developers Group magazine issue since the year 2000! He specialises in all things related to .NET, C#, Borland Delphi, XML/Web Services, XSLT, Test-Driven Development, Extreme Programming, agile methods and Scrum. In his career to date, Craig has written cost estimating software for the oil and gas industry and asset valuation software for local councils and the Ministry of Defence. He has a day-job, a wife and a son.

Craig can be reached via his web site: http://www.craigmurphy.com

VENUE
Microsoft Scotland
127 George Street, Edinburgh, EH2 4JN

More here:

http://www.scottishdevelopers.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=152

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DDD3 – Pulling it all together…

Here’s a rough summary of what folks are saying about the third DeveloperDeveloperDeveloper event held last Saturday, 3rd June 2006. If you’ve blogged about DDD3 and I’ve missed you, it wasn’t intentional, please let me know and I’ll update this post. Once again, huge thanks to the attendees, the speakers, the Microsoft events staff and catering folks, it made it a super day all round!

[Updated] Ben Hall enjoyed the ice cream and the freebies here. Ben reckoned we should aim for Level 300-400 sessions next time…point taken.

[Updated] John Winstanley, previous speaker, write about it here.

[Updated] Tom (Albinson?) provides a good write up over here. Again, your comments about the technical depth of the sessions are noted and will be address next time around.

Richard Peat blogged about his take on the day here. Somehow, I didn’t get around to speaking to you, sorry!

Barry Dorrans enjoyed watching his slides retract after somebody at the back of the room “lent” on the switch (now I should have photographed it, but I’m sure it has a “lift up” cover protecting it).

Liam Westley, his “resources” are here. Sadly he won’t be giving you £5000 to start your own company, but he’ll give you a spreadsheet and some other useful tips!

1 Chap From Blighty, Guy Smith-Ferrier writes about his day here. Guy has written a book about .NET Internationalisation.

Zi Makki has posted some photos over here. There’s no way I poured myself a glass of wine like that…it was staged purely for the camera, honestly!

Phil Winstanley has stuck his pictures from the day here. Colin Mackay has done likewise over here. Colin posts a short piece here.

Dave McMahon reviews the day here. At the same time he publishes my photograph of Dave and ex-FBI man, Ed Gibson (now Microsoft’s Chief Security Adviser). Ed spotted Dave, instantly recognising him from the FBI’s Most Wanted list. This picture confirms Dave’s capture! Dave’s partner in crime, not wanted by the FBI, Richard Costall publishes a short’n’sweet review here. Here’s a snap of Richard and Dave:

richard and dave.gif
[Richard and Dave – caption contest: in the comments please!]

dave and ed - sm.gif
[Dave’s captured by Ed!]

I managed to catch up with Simon Harriyott, who I mistakely confused with Simon Thorneycroft – sorry SimonH, if you knew how many people I spoke to whilst at DDD3, you might be able to forgive me!

Jono Bacon writes about DDD3 and the interesting date the sixth day of the sixth month of 2006 – since I am a noted Metallica fan, Slayer are on my playlist too! Here’s a snap of Jono and John enjoying a beer:

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Mike Ormond was there too, did you know that Word (in Office 2007) will let you post to a blog directly? Read more about my 9 favourite things in Word here.

Nick Swan, speaker, has posted his write up here. Nick also links to Chris Garrett’s photos. Here’s one of my favourites:

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[Link]

Daniel Fisher, lennybacon, makes mention of the event here. Dan, we organised the weather too, it takes some doing, but we know the right people! Dan’s running a conference in Dusseldorf, 27th July 2006: NRW06, I will be there, talking about test-driven development, unit testing, and automating code coverage using unit tests.

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DDD3 – I will travel 1000 miles for it!

DDD3 - The Crowd

It “sold out” within days of registration opening.

It attracted over 345 attendees (the waiting list was cleared down the day before).

It was (and is) DeveloperDeveloperDeveloper!

The first DDD of 2006 kicked of on the 3rd of June, attracting huge crowds of information-hungry developers along a handful of non-developers. With sessions covering a vast array of platforms and technologies, there was something for everyone (and if you were stuck, there was always the Haagen Daaz ice cream, so graciously laid on by Microsoft catering!)

Once again, Dinus Cruz (pictured, below) scared us senseless (I nearly typed another -less word there!) with his low-level hacking of the CLR. Dinus was in good company over lunch, which saw Microsoft’s Chief Security Advisor, Ed Gibson join the party. Ed, a retired FBI agent, spoke about Organised Crime and Criminal Activity on the Internet, it was a truly superb 25 minutes!

Dinus prepares
[Dinus Cruz]

Ed wasn’t the only superhero present at DDD. Joining the ranks of Ian and Phil who stepped in to a missing speaker’s slide deck, Richard Fennell was given no more than 6 minutes notice that he was needed on stage! Feedback tells me Richard did a really good job and pleased the code hungry audience! Rockin’ Richard, truly rockin’!

Richard - superhero
[Richard Fennell]

iancooper.gif
[Ian Cooper]

Youngsters
And would DDD be the same with the every popular “youngsters“? I caught these two enthusiasts taking a well-earned break upstairs near Memphis and very close to the speaker lounge: obviously they were keen to get close to the action! Actually, that Sony Vaio, it’s playing Faulty Towers! Guys, if you want to identify yourselves, please do, I’d be happy to link to your blogs, etc.

The Youngsters
[Youngsters]

Method in my Madness
A while ago I got in the habit of taking photographs whilst kneeling down. It spooks a lot of folks. But in this case, it worked a treat. Dave McMahon (right) meets Ed Gibson (left).

Dave and Ed
[Ed and Dave]

Ed Gibson
[Ed Gibson, retired FBI agent]

Big Fish
[I’m telling you, it was this big…Ed tells us just how big that fish was]

The Three Amigos
[Los tres AmigosMichael Willers, lennybacon (Dan Fisher) and Dave McMahon]

In this next picture you can see the Microsoft team hard at work…Mike Taulty, Mike Ormond, Mark Walton, Richard Erwin, Martin Parry…Dinus Cruz is there too, as are Matthew and John from VMR Consulting (hats off to these boys, they came to learn about development such that they could get a better understanding of what developers actually do – I gave them a swift overview of Visual Studio 2005, discussed design patterns, nunit, cruise control.net, test driven development amongst a handful of other topics!) In this picture, you see Mark Walton and Richard Erwin going through Visual Studio Team System.

allwork.gif
[All work…]

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[Jono Bacon, with Ian in the background!]

After show party
Huge kudos to Zi Makki for organising drinks and food for the Saturday night! I enjoyed a Magners topped up with ice (not my usual tipple, but it was the end of a really hard, but hugely enjoyable, day)

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Meet the Team
DDD is a team effort, and you, the attendees, as part of the community, are part of that team. There would be no DDD without you, without you, the folks below would have to find something else to do with their time!

Logistically, those folks you saw running around with a blue “DDD Organiser” badge helped make the event happen. There was the web-site, there was the food, the giveaways, the registration, the speaker certificates, the agenda, the voting mechanism, the feedback, the speaker liasion. Of course, huge thanks are also due to the folks that also played a major part in the day: the Microsoft Events staff who dealt with your registrations and prize draw tickets!

tony.gifphil.gifmelita.gifcraig.gif
[Tony Rogerson, Phil Winstanley, the lovely Melita Walton (yes, wife of the aforementioned Mark!), Craig Murphy]

ian.gifbenjamin.gifjonathan.gifmike.gif
[Ian Cooper, Benjamin Mitchell, Jonathan Hodgson, Mike Taulty and his alter ego!]

zi.gif
[Zi Makki]

Other pictures
Phil has some pictures here.

If you have published some pictures, please let me know (e-mail or comments) and I’ll update this posting.

All good things come to an end…or do they?
Like the high that the wicked cool euphoria a rock concert leaves you with, DDD achieves the same high over the course of the day. Likened to “TechEd squeezed in to a day“, DDD will be back and it will have all the same good ingredients (namely community community community). I left DDD3 with the same “feel good” that I did when I left TechEd 2000 (which also rocked), the buzz continued with me as I drove the 500 miles back home to Scotland.

DDD4, it won’t be long, you can be sure of that, watch this space feed!

In the meantime, we want your feedback!

DDD3 – Feedback!

Folks,

That’s the third DeveloperDeveloperDeveloper day over…huge thanks to the 350 of you who attended and made it a great day all round!

Those of you who won the prizes, MSDN subscriptions or a developer.* book, enjoy 🙂

I don’t know about you (and *we* need to know about you!), but I thought it rocked!

If you attended the event, we are really keen to learn what you thought of it, good or bad.

Please feel free to contact me via this blog, via e-mail (address is on this page: http://www.craigmurphy.com) or via the official feedback form here:

http://www.developerday.co.uk/ddd/feedback.asp

What worked for you? What didn’t work?

What rocked? What sucked?

Were the screen resolutions too high? Was the food too sugary? No matter how parochial you think your whinge is, tell us!

Please, do tell us, we read every item of feedback and make a point of actioning every one!

There will be a fourth DDD later this year, keep watching this space amongst others!

If you liked what you saw and want speak at the next DDD, do two things:

1. Join a community if you haven’t already!
2. Get in touch with myself or any of the other DDD Organisers that you may have met on the day!

Feedback, please!!