Friday, September 11, 2009

Italy Day 14: Rome

Our last day of our trip has us heading back to where we started...Rome. With a 7 AM flight back home the next day, we had one last night to live it up before heading back.

I had been wondering if Rome could live up to our first impression. You know how sometimes when you go back somewhere for the second time, it just isn't quite the same as the wonderful first impression you had. I was very happy that it did. We had another great time.

We didn't really have an agenda. I just wanted to walk around and take it all in one more time. We got into the main part of the city at about 5 or so in the evening. We walked all up from Piazza Venecia to Piazza de Popolo doing some window shopping. We headed over to the Spanish Steps again, and then down past Trevi Fountain. We ended up in Campo de Fiore for dinner and had a nice time in the lively square. Stephanie wanted to grab her favorite white chocolate gelato one last time, so we headed to Piazza Navona later for that. Seeing all these great places and the backstreets in between cemented our admiration for the city once again. Walking Rome in the evening was one of the lasting impressions I will take from the trip.

That's a wrap. Its up at 4:30 AM to fly back home. I can't wait to come back....I know we will.

Italy Day 13: Orvieto

We left Florence and took a train to Orvieto. The town is located in Umbria, in the heart of wine country. We planned to explore a bit of the town of Orvieto, known for wine and olive oil, in the early afternoon before headed to a nearby winery to stay the night.

We visted the old part of town of Orvieto, which rises above the surrounding wine country. You actually have to take a tram/ski lift type ride to get to the old town from below. It is pretty small up top, and has a great old country feel to it. We walked the cobblestone streets, and checked out the Orvieto Cathedral.

We then headed to our winery, Locanda Palazzone. I cannot tell you how excited we were to arrive. The surrounding country was just beautiful, the view from the winery amazing. The winery itself had a classic look, with a newly remodeled interior. Our room was two stories, with a view of the countryside.

We relaxed and swam in the pool, walked around the grounds, and had an imimate dinner outside. The food was spectacular. I could not recommend this place enough to anyone wanted a great Tuscan experience. It was our favorite place we stayed of the trip thus far.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Italy Day 11 and 12: Florence

We left Venice on a Sunday morning and arrived in Florence a couple hours later. Our first reaction when we got to Florence...."Whoa...Cars". We had spent the last week in two cities that basically had none: the Cinque Terre and Venice. Back to reality with speeding cars and motorcycles everywhere in downtown Florence was a trip back to reality a bit.

We checked into our bed and breakfast after arriving. This proved to be the most disappointing place we stayed during the trip. It was a bit outside of the area we would have liked to be, and it proved to be a little less than ideal from a cleanliness perspective. This may have slightly impressioned our Florence experience, but we tried to make the best of it and get past it.

We had reservations at the Uffizi Gallery in the late afternoon and headed out to make them. The Uffizi had some reallly amazing pieces. I particularly enjoyed seeing a couple of the Da Vinci and Michaelangelo pieces. They definately stand out to me from the rest.

That evening we had a fantastic dinner....what may prove to be the best food of the trip. We ate at a small place on Piazza di Santa Croce. After a long day, it was just what the docter ordered. We had a long relaxing delicious Tuscan meal.

On our second day, we wanted to explore a bit more. We headed up to Piazza Michaelangelo and enjoyed some amazing views of the city. We then enjoyed a nice walk down by the river and across the Ponte Vecchio. We enjoy this part of the walk a lot.

We continued through town and winded up cruising through the Mercado Centrale, a busy gathering of tents with vendors selling all sorts of stuff. It was interesting but not quite our thing. We nevertheless took the opportunity to snag a few deals.

In the evening we headed across town and up to another great lookout spot...Fiesole. I really enjoyed the view of Florence and its surroundings from here. Just fantastic. We had dinner at a place overlooking the city. The view was fantastic, but the food was not up to par for some of the meals we have had.

We set our next sights on a more intimate feel of Tuscany...

Monday, September 7, 2009

Italy Day 9 and 10: Venice

Internet access has become a little more difficult, and thus the combined posts...

Our last two days in Venice were just awesome. We really enjoyed the city a lot, and we will have some great memories.

On our second to last day, we started out by walking through the city to catch a vaporetto to Murano. Just walking through the city to different points is a lot of fun. One minute you are walking amongst bustling tourists, such as near the Rialto Bridge, and the next you are the only people on a deserted little street walking over canals and boats.

Murano is know for its glass blowing. After getting off the boat (only a ten minute ride or so) we walked up and down the streets. We must have gone into about 50 or so little glass shops, all with outstanding piece of glass art. We got a few item to take back that particularly caught our eye. Stephanie was truly in love with this place. We had a nice sit down lunch with caprese, lasagna, chicken and potatoes before heading back.

After siesta and before dinner we took a long walk around a part of the city we had not seen before. We crossed the Rialto and walked down through the city to another bridge, the Accademia, before circling back to a restaurant we had targeted. We walked as the sun went down, had drinks and took some great pictures. We ate at a great pizzaria to end the night.

On our last day in Venice, we targeted some famous sights. We headed to St. Mark's Square early in the day. We toured the square and St. Mark's Basilica with our audioguides. We did the Correr Museum and then the Doge's Palace. The square itself and the Doge's Palace were our favorites.

In the evening, we had heard about a Venitian tradition that consisted of a Venetian pub crawl: going from wine bar to wine bar having wine and small appetizers. We decided to hit this up, and had a blast. We went to four or five different places trying different things. After we stopped eating, we continued to grab drinks to go and walk the streets. We ended up in St. Mark's square again. It was my favorite place to be at night. Three orchestra bands play great music to delight the the crowds. It was fun to listen and drink along. We crusied back to our hotel late, after a fabulous night.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Italy Day 8: Venice

We got up early to start our travelling today to Venice. It took three trains and about 6 hours or so to get there, but this day of travel seemed way more relaxed than the others. I think both of us have gotten used to the trains and train stations at this point.

On the last leg, we boarded a train in Bologna headed for Venice. We hopped in a car, and ended up sitting right next to the same Americans that we dined next to in Rome about 4 days earlier. Small world. There were six of them, and they were all super nice. Stephanie sat with the girls and chatted while I had beers with the guys. It was a very fun couple hours on this train into Venice, and it flew by.

We arrived in Venice in the afternoon and made our way via vaporetto, water bus, down the Grand Canal and to our hotel near the Rialto Bridge. Venice is beautiful. It is a little surreal with all the canals and streets intertwined.

We dined late at a fancy restaurant that was delicious. It was a fun and romantic dinner. We wandered around after dinner, stopping on the Rialto Bridge, looking in store fronts. We ended up walking into St. Mark's Square where orchestras were entertaining onlookers. Its all a pretty magical place.

We ended the night with a Gondola ride. It was after midnight and we crusied around in our private gondola for about an hour. Full moon was out and we had a bottle of prosecco in hand. We had a great time.

Italy Day 7: Cinque Terre

Our last day in the Cinque Terre, and I was ready to do some hiking. I convinced Stephanie to wake up early and do the hike from our town, Vernazza, to the town of Monterroso. The hike between these two towns is the toughest, but the most scenic. We both loved the hike. Stephanie wasn't loving it about 2o minutes in, as the first stretch seems to go up forever. But we were having a great time once it leveled off and had some amazing views. We got some great pictures.

We were in need of a rest once reaching Monterroso, so we rented chairs and an umbrella on the beach and laid out in the sun. I did a little cooling off in the Mediterranean as well. Very refreshing. We grabbed some lunch and checked out the town a bit before taking a ferry back to Vernazza.

In the evening we decided to spend our last night in Vernazza, and had dinner Il Pirata delle Cinque Terre. The place is run by two twins from Sicily, and they were very charming and entertaining. The food was absolutely fantastic as well. This made for probably our most enjoyable dining experience thus far. Massimo chatted with us tons on each visit to our table, and he had some great lines that we will remember. On of my favorites was when he was explaining why they don't have a view from their restaurant. He said they prefer "the view on the plate". Another memorable one was the forms of payment they accepted. They said "cash or wash dishes" when we asked if they took Visa. They said they preferred wash dishes. They have some incredible desserts as well. Stephanie was in love with their fresh fruit slushies. They had made a fig shushie that day. We ended up having two (we had one in the afternoon, and had one again after we came back for dinner there). We also had a Cannoli with riccota and chocolate at their insistance that was great as well.

All in all, I think this was my favorite day in the Cinque Terre.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Italy Day 6: Cinque Terre

We had the most relaxing day of the trip thus far. The morning was spent laying out on the rocks that line the harbor, in between trips to the local laundromat washing our clothes from the trip. Due to the heat, we went through clothes much faster than anticipated. We grabbed items to each from the local bakery and the local weekly market, which happened to be going on today.

Late in the day we took a ferry and headed two towns south to the town of Manarola. It was fun to see the coastline and all five towns from the water. We walked through Manarola and window shopped before grabbing some drinks near the harbor.

At sunset, we walked down the Via dell'Amorè to the town of Riomaggiore. The path is cut right out of the rock in many places (pictured here). It was a perfect time of night, and a great walk. Once in Riomaggiore, we walked through town looking for Ristorante Ripa del Sole. Up what seemed like a never ending staircase, we found it at the top of town. We had a very nice dinner there.

We took the train back to Vernazza. It was a bit of an adventure as I thought we had got on the wrong train. We were very happy when it did stop in Vernazza. We ended the night with drinks at the Blue Marlin, a very fun and local night hotspot.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Italy Day 5: Cinque Terre

We spent a good part of the day traveling from Rome to the Cinque Terre in the Italian Riviera. We took a train from Termini Station north to La Spezia, which took about 4 hours. When then changed trains, and took about a 2o minute ride into the town of Vernazza.

Vernazza, in the Cinque Terre, is an incredible place. It is a refreshing difference from the fast pace of Rome. There is but one street that goes through the middle of town....for people only...no cars. We can walk from the beginning of town, down the main street to the water in 5 minutes.

We dropped our bags and cruised around town. We grabbed a bite and sat by the harbor, taking in all in. After making dinner reservations, I headed up the trail away from Vernazza to take some photos from some great viewpoints. I think I have some postcard material.

We had dinner at a romantic spot, Ristorante Al Castello. Our table was right out over a cliff overlooking the Mediterranean. It was the best food of the trip thus far. We both had Lasagne al Pesto. It will be hard not to come back for it again before we leave.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Italy Day 4: Rome

We did not have a ton planned for our final day in Rome, and it ended up being a nice relaxing day. We went to Galleria Borghese in the morning. The musuem contains several works of Bernini. Bernini's Apollo and Daphne is remarkable, and we circled back to check it out twice.

Just before sunset, we headed out to Piazza del Popolo. We strolled from there past many shops and street performers. We wound up having dinner outside in a little piazza just a couple blocks north of the Pantheon. We ended the night with some amazing Gelato at Giolitti's, a famous spot. It was the most pleasant night in terms of weather, probably about 75 degrees or so around 11. We walked through the streets back to our hotel.

Tomorrow we are headed north to the Cinque Terra. Should be fantastic.

Italy Day 3: Rome

We woke up today and headed for Vatican City. We debated long and hard about whether to book a tour of the Vatican Museum and St. Peter's Basilica, or use our audioguides. Buying the tour (60 euro) meant skipping the long lines people warn you about. And remeber it is super hot outside. But we decided to take our chances. After taxiing to the Vatican, we walked right in....no line at all!

We started at the Vatican Museum. We traveled through room upon room of amazing sculptures, tapestries, frescos and mosaics. The art is amazing, but the building may be even more amazing. It is a piece of art in itself. The ceilings are just as impressive as any of the pieces lining the halls.

The most famous attractions in the Vatican Museum are the Rafael's Stanze della Segnatura and Michaelangelo's Sistine Chapel. Many say that Sistine Chapel is the greatest work of art done by any one man. It did not disappoint, as Stephanie and I look at the ceiling for about a half hour.

After leaving the Vatican Museum, we headed to St. Peter's Basilica. We entered through St. Peter's Square. The sheer size of the square and the church itself is stunning. St. Peter's Basilica is the largest church in the world, and contains the tomb of St. Peter himself, along with numerous popes. Words cannot describe the church itself. It is something I hope everyone has a chance to see for themselves at some point.

After a day of sightseeing at the Vatican, we headed over to Travestere for a late dinner. It is a popular spot for dining among locals. We headed down cobblestone streets and alleys in search of a small family restaurant we were recommended. We found it and had a great true, long Italian dinner. It was fantastic.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Italy Day 2: Rome

Day 2 was a busy and incredible day. I am blown away by being here. I have not experienced anything like this ever before.

We ate a delicious breakfast at our hotel, getting up some energy before we headed out. We walked from our hotel towards the Colosseum. On the half hour walk, we passed by ancient ruins and incredible streets and buildings. The streets are almost all cobblestone. Approaching the Colosseum the first time is pretty exciting.

I will note that there is some major, major heat going on here today. Hot and humid. Purchasing water left and right already.

We had purchased a Roma Pass earlier, which allowed us to walk right past the long line and into the Colosseum...no wait. I had downloaded maps and free audioguides on our iPods, and we started them up when we got inside. This was a great idea I must say. We watched hot tourists following guides in small groups as we strolled around at our own pace listening to our audioguide. Hearing the history and seeing the Colosseum from the inside is awesome.

We then headed towards the Roman Forum, going the wrong way several times before finally landing at the appropriate entrance. The Forum was the beginning of Rome, containing mainly ruins now. Again, equipped with our maps and audioguides, we navigated around on our own, pausing in the shade frequently.

After finishing up there, we headed towards the Vittorio Emanuele monument on Capitol Hill for lunch. We had a tip that this is a great spot, and it was. On top of the monument, several stories up, you can see 360 degrees of Rome. Getting some food and drinks under umbrellas and fans was great.

Next was the Pantheon. The dome ceiling of the Pantheon is unbelievable. I could stare at that for days. I don't get how someone could build it today, much less a couple thousand years ago. After this stop, its siesta time so we grabbed a taxi.

After resting up, we headed back out for dinner. We had revervations at a little place outside Campo De Fiore. Its nightime now, and Rome is bustling with people out drinking and eating in the streets. Almost all restaurants have tables on patios on the cobblestone streets. Ours was no different and we ate a nice meal outside next to another American couple from New York.

After dinner we strolled on a night walk across Rome. We went through Piazza Navona and grabbed dark and white chocolate gelato. Stephanie loved the white. We ate it outside, sitting on the Four Rivers Fountain. We then crusied over to Trevi Fountain, which may be the most amazing thing I have ever seen. I had purposely waited to see it until nighttime, and it was worth it. We ended the night walking up the Spanish Steps.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Italy Day 1: Rome

I will say Day 1, but it was really more like 2. We left Seattle at noon on Wednesday and arrived in Rome at about noon on Thursday. We had a layover at the Amsterdam airport, which was really nice.

After landing and grabbing our backpacks, we got on the Leonardo Express train, which took us from the airport into Termini Station in Rome. The train was hot...it is pretty damn hot in Rome right now in general. Our hotel, the Grand St. Regis, is within walking distance of the station, so we hoofed it over there. After a short walk with our bags, we were hot, sweaty and exhausted, but excited to be here.

We got unpacked and then headed out. We decided to walk toward the heart of Rome in search of a little dinner. I started snapping pictures of amazing buildings as we walked, and shortly realized that I probably should take a picture of just about every building. It is unbelievable. We ended up walking by the Pantheon and some other awesome Piazzas, before settling down in a little outdoor spot for some wine and antipasta. It felt great to relax here.

We walked a bit more and then grabbed a taxi home. We were ready to crash at this point. We had both been up for about 30 hours straight. Looking forward to a big day 2...

Italy

Stephanie and I are in Italy right now for the next two weeks. We will be staying the following places on our trip...
  • Rome
  • Cinque Terra
  • Venice
  • Florence
  • Orvieto

I am going to do a little blog journal of our travels, hitting up internet cafes when we get the chance.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Home For Sale

We are looking for a buyer for our home in Sammamish, WA. Stephanie put up a website for us. Check it out and pass it along to anyone who might be looking...

http://www.buyinsammamish.com



Saturday, July 25, 2009

Scheduling or Dispatching Work in Windows Azure

I have been developing applications for the cloud on Windows Azure since its initial CTP was released last fall at PDC. I just recently upgraded to the latest July CTP of the SDK, released publicly last week. They have made a major improvement in this version: the ability to have multiple web and worker role types per application. This has made it significantly easier for me to schedule/dispatch offline processing in my worker roles. I thought I would share an example of what I call the "Dispatcher Pattern".

Here is a sample of how I can now implement the "Dispatcher Pattern" using multiple worker role types for an application:

Requirements:
  • My application needs to perform a background task, such as aggregating different pieces of data, very often.
  • I want to be able to scale this work and ensure that I don't have multiple instances doing the same work at the same time.

Solution:

  • A "Dispatcher" worker role will quickly determine what work should occur, inserting a queue message into a queue for each piece work. There will only be one instance of the "Dispatcher" running, so you can be confident that the same items are not being inserted into the queue multiple times. The "Dispatcher" role can queue work as frequently as needed.
  • A second role type actually does the work. This role type, "Aggregation Role" in this case, pulls a message off the queue, does its work, and repeats. While you only needed one instance of a "Dispatcher", you can scale to as many of this role type as you need to keep up with your queue.

I think this is a very useful pattern when it comes to needing to initiate work to take place in your worker roles in Windows Azure, especially when the work is not triggered from an action taking place in a Web Role. You can now have multiple worker role types in an application, and scale them independently.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

New Law Firm Site: CMS Law Firm

Recently I have been buliding some sites for a new friend of mine, Chris Small.

He is a Bellevue DUI attorney, Seattle DUI attorney, Bellevue criminal attorney, Seattle criminal attorney, Bellevue traffic lawyer, Seattle traffic lawyer, and Seattle eminent domain lawyer. Click on the links to check out the sites and give him a call if you need help.

One of the cool things about working with Chris has been how in tune he is with Search Engine Optimization. After only a few weeks, his main site, www.cmslawfirm.com already had a Google page rank of 3. Pretty impressive. More to come as these sites climb the ladder...

Friday, June 5, 2009

Auth and Auth in the Cloud

I have been developing on the Windows Azure platform for the past 8 months or so. One of the more interesting reads I have had is a developer white paper on the .NET Access Control Service, one of the components of the Azure Services Platform. It gives a great overview building Claims-based applications and dives into a sample application. I have to say that I think Microsoft is headed in the right direction to delivering Identity Federation in the cloud, making the migration of enterprise applications to the cloud more of a reality.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Top 5 Concerts

I was talking to a buddy of mine about the best concerts we have seen. Thought it would make for an interesting blog post. Here is my list, after some careful deliberation...

#5. Dave Matthews Band at the Gorge. I'm not singling out a particular show. Any one from 2001 - 2003 is on my list here. But one of them for sure makes my top 5. The music, venue and the whole camping experience during my college years is a great memory.

#4. Paul Simon at the Paramount, Seattle WA in 2000. Sat in the front row...of the orchestra pit. Literally leaning on the front of the stage, and shook Paul's hand after the encore. Seeing those songs performed that close was great.

#3. John Mayer at Richards on Richards in Vancouver, BC in 2001. It was awesome to see him before he made it big in a pretty small club/bar, just after Room For Squares was released. There were probably 500 people there or so, and you could walk right up to the front of the stage.


#2. Dave Matthews performing solo acoustic at Benaroya Hall in Seattle, WA in 2002. It was a 2 hour set of just Dave by himself in a very private setting. Acoustics are amazing in there. Dave played a 5 song encore with a 15 minute story mixed in there as well.

#1. U2 during their Elevation Tour in Vancouver, BC in 2001. Could have swapped in their Vertigo Tour show in Seattle, WA here as well but the 2001 show was my first time seeing them live and is deserving of the top spot. U2 may be the best live show of all time.

Honorable mentions (great artists/shows I have also seen):

Eric Clapton, Fleetwood Mac, Paul Simon, James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Jason Mraz, Counting Crows, Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds, Jack Johnson, Ben Harper, Maroon 5, Mat Kearney, Glen Phillips, Ben Folds, Ben Lee, Death Cab for Cutie, Green Day, Matt Nathanson, James Morrison.

I am headed to Coldplay at the Gorge in July and have a feeling that might crack the top 5. We will see...

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Site Review

Paul, a buddy of mine getting his MBA, recently completed his first website as part of a homework assignment. When I recently saw him, he asked me for my humble opinion...

While I absolutely love the My Way page, I have to say I was not overly impressed with the home page, even with my expectations going in. Here are my thoughts:

1. Looks like Paul was going for the simple approach of completing this assigment. And thats great. So many sites have done simple well. Take Google or Craigslist. Problem with Paul's site is that it doesn't do simple well. It looks like a first website. Borrowing a simple look and feel from someone else would have worked well, and been maybe even faster.

2. We are in business school now, not elementary school. We need some originality. Where is the catchy name? Where is the logo? "Paul's home page"? How long did it take to come up with that one? A little branding would go a long way.

3. Again, back to business school. The internet is a place where money can be made. Even though this is just a first website, lets get some advertising on there, some sponsorships, to bring in some money. Who is opposed to making a few bucks while doing your homework?

I always try to let my actions do the talking, not my words. So I took my own advice here and applied it to Paul's site.

I give you ... www.pauggle.com

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Rule of 3

I have been consulting for Microsoft for the past several months in the Windows Azure space. Recently I have been meeting with some folks to help define some best practices for building applications on Windows Azure. One of the people I have been working with is J.D. Meier. He has a couple of great blogs: a MSDN blog and one called Sources of Insight.

I read a recent post on http://www.sourcesofinsight.com/ that I thought was really good. It was about the Rule of 3, and how to apply it to short term and long term goals. Check it out if you get a chance.

On a different note, a friend of mine was asking me to blog about his new website. The creative juices are flowing. Stay tuned...

Friday, April 3, 2009

March Web Traffic Statistics

We'll, another great month of March has come and gone. It definately was one of my busiest, with managing http://www.wearmybracket.com in addition to http://www.finalforman.net. I thought I would post some traffic numbers, for those of you interested besides myself.

The traffic numbers in 2009 for FinalForman saw another increase. Its always nice to see them keep going up, even if its just slightly. Here is a table breaking down the numbers compared to the last two years:

March 2007
Unique Visitors: 635
Total Visits: 2906
Pages Viewed: 64904

March 2008
Unique Visitors: 971
Total Visits: 3316
Pages Viewed: 31434

March 2009
Unique Visitors: 1321
Total Visits: 3706
Pages Viewed: 77550

The single highest traffic day came on the first Friday of the tournament, March 20th. We saw 431 unique visitors on that day. The day prior and the day after also saw unique visitors in the 400s.

WearMyBracket.com had its first March, and its numbers were not nearly as impressive. There were slightly over 200 unique visitors for the month of March, with a single day high of 47 on the day I spammed people with my lovely email.

Looking forward to continuing the upward trends next year.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Silverlight, ADO.NET Data Services, and WCF Services

I knew immediately that I wanted to use Silverlight for the user interface for my new WearMyBracket.com website. I wanted a simple, slick UI that would be straight to the point, but still leave folks a little impressed. And I felt that I had just enough UI skills to get this done.

I decided on a "flip" effect to take users through a simple order process. As the user proceeded though my order process, I would flip their canvas over for each step. This provided me an opportunity to save their progress to a database on each transition. As far as I know, there are two good ways to do this in Silverlight: an ADO.NET Data Service or a WCF Service. Either of these can run in your web application hosting your Silverlight application.

I started down the path of adding an ADO.NET Data Service to my web application. I liked the flexibiliy that this presented me. I would not have to write any custom WCF services, as any data operations I wanted to do within my Silverlight application would be possible via the REST-based data service. In addtion, my data model consisted of only a few tables, so I felt things would not be overly complex and were a good candidate for using a data service. Creating the data service is made super simple these days in Visual Studio. After I created my database schema in SQL Server, I went to my web application project, selected "Add New Item", and added an ADO.NET Entity Data Model to my project. After that model is generated from my database schema, I then added the ADO.NET Data Service. A few tweaks in code to relate the two, and I was good to go.

Back in my Silverlight project, I added a service reference to my data service, and started playing around with reading and writing to the data service. I quickly saw that this was not going to be quite as easy as I thought. Because of some of the relationships in my schema, and the way the data service needs to be tracking objects, I would have to make multiple calls to the data service from my Silverlight client in order to do some of my operations. And I also realized that maybe my scenario isn't quite right for a ADO.NET Data Service anyway. After all, my simple application would only need a couple of WCF services that could do all my work, providing simple and streamlined calls from my Silverlight app. I went back and removed my data service, added a Silverlight-enabled WCF service and was on my way. Writing the implemenation within my couple WCF services took less than an hour.

ADO.NET Data Services are flexible, in that you do not have to write any custom services for data operations. However, the I think application needs to have the neccessity for that flexibility. I didn't have that neccessity. I only had one client calling application. My data operations were few, and were not going to change. In my case, writing a couple simple WCF services was the way to go.

Monday, February 23, 2009

WearMyBracket.com

If you know me, then you probably have participated in, or at least about http://www.finalforman.net. The site started out as a way to expand a college March Madness pool back in 2001. Today it is a fun way to keep in touch with a lot of people, and enjoy the month of March.

After getting denied for tickets for the opening rounds in Boise this year, a large group of us decided to head to Las Vegas instead. Blessing in disguise, maybe? While musing about the fun we will have, an idea emerged about wearing our picks on a t-shirt. People seemed to like the idea. So I am now introducing....WearMyBracket.com. Anyone can purchase one of our custom designed shirts. I'll give a shout out to Jake, for his help on the shirt and graphics, and Hans, for their help on getting this off the ground. Place your orders!

With two sites to manage during the month of March, I am going to be a busy man. I am already working on a few improvements to FinalForman.net for this year.

Stay tuned for another post, where I will discuss some of the technical choices I made for this simple site.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

I'm back!

It has been a long time since my last post.  There are a variety of reasons for this.  Some of those are good, like the following:
  • Spending lots of time with my one-year old.
  • Being healthier and more active.
  • Pursuing other hobbies in my free time, such as music.
  • Found other outlets for communication, such as Facebook.
But all of those doesn't mean I can find time to share a post or two.  After all, I am still not a 5:01 developer.  So I am back, with some motivation from Greg.  Stay tuned for my February post, coming soon...