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PDC 2008 Conference log

I am currently attending the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles to scout out some of trends in tomorrow’s tech and software. Here is some thoughts to be updated during brakes and at the hotel, so plaese forgive any misspelling or inconsistencies but be welcome to comment, criticize and correct.

Thursday October 30: Silverlight and VirtualEarth

Peter flew home yesterday, so I’m on my own today. I have made a habit of attending a morning Silverlight session, and today was about the roadmap for integrating more controls. Soon, web apps will be fully featured apps. Exiting times.Then I went to hear more about integration of Virtual Earth because I thought it would make a really cool view for our global information infrastructure. The conclusion isthat it would, but it’s dificoul, so I guess it’s a bit further down the road for us.

I also started mocking up a prototype of our backend in Silverlight with a few of the tips and tricks from sessions. It is giong to be really cool, I think. Now including user friendliness.

Wednesday October 29: Touch

Today we were introduced to some of the key features of the coming Windows 7 OS. Apart from fixing the obvious travesties of Vista such as gadgets being confined to the sidebar, accelerated search and better window preview. All good. But the real fun lies in Windows 7’s support for touch and multi-touch. Touch will also be supported by Silverlight, so the bank willing I’ll slap some win7 on a touch screen in no time. One could go with Microsoft’s Surface that looks much like a touch enabled coffee table, but at $15.000 I think  that I - like today’s session speaker - will go for the more affordable (about $2.000)  HP TouchSmart.

Tuesday October 28: Live Mesh

Today I’m paying more attention to fiddling with Silverlight than to the release keynote on Windows 7 which is basically a fix of the most critical bugs in Vista plus a few convenient additions and UX reworks. I am told they want to connect the PC, web and phone which is hardly a controversial strategy.

What is really cool is that the Live Team has released a new service called Mesh. Mesh basically  allows you to integrate live services such as Live ID and Messenger into rich web apps. We have seen some relly cool demos of a Tesco grocery shopping Silverlight app running outside the browser and the iPlayer at BBC. But unfortunately none of them are online yet.

Other than that I’m just looking forward to the party at Universal studios tonight.

PDC Keynote

Monday October 27: Releasing the cloud

Today Microsoft’s Ray Ozzie launched the Windows Azure clouded ‘operating system’ for rich web applications. Azure is the big thing here so I’m really paying attention to figure out what all the fuzz is about. What Azure does is basically taking over all the tedious tasks of setting up the servers and communication and all that stuff that usually happens in a server farm deep underground. What Microsoft has done with Azure is basically to build huge data centers with som really big servers all over the globe and made them available through a service management interface.

Azure Services Platform

See what Azure can do by downloading the Beta version of BLueHoo (Its just like Imity in the old days only cooler) to your mobile here.

As far as i can compile at present what Azure is giong to mean to the Internet is something like this:

  • Service management: No more need to worry about managing apps, allocating server resources and managing files when developing web apps. Your software conglomerate can start in the garage.
  • Infinite scalability: 5 to 5 billion users instantly. Everybody is going to be able to deploy and scale web apps as needed. You do not need to actually own a server or bother with upgrading capacity as you speed to fame.
  • Deployment of web apps is made easier as the Azure datacenters will act just like an operating system on a desktop computer. This means that it’s easier to develop, deploy and MANAGE web apps. So you won’t have to spend your time allocating database resources and all that  boring stuff.

BUT: It’s a professional service provided by Microsoft and they will not tell us what its going to cost until sometime next year, so don’t leave your host just yet. In fact, I think that for non-rich web apps such as this blog a traditional host will probably work just fine, so I’m not leaving media temple for a while. But for RIA’s, Azure will be a gamechanger for sure!

Sunday October 26: Silverlight

Today I attended a pre-conference session on Rich Internet Applications (RIA for those of you who can actually keep up with the acronums) in Silverlight - Microsofts enhanced visual User Interface platform. Its like flash only with the power of real apps in C#. Its the way of the future. Rumour has it that Adobe has developed something similar but noone dares speak the name so I’m not sure what it’s called..

LA Convention Center

Saturday October 25: Jet lag 

I think its 9 PM.I just arrived at the millennium Biltmore Hotel at 506 South Grand Avenue in downtowl LA after 26 hours of travelling from Copenhagen with transfers in Amsterdam and Washington. Tired.

Millennium Biltmore

Facebook - the bling of social capital?

After an irresistible surge of peer pressure I finally gave in and created a facebook profile this weekend. My initial resentment towards putting too much energy into maintaining yet another web 2.0 profile was spawned by the seeming lack of a shared theme or, in the parlour of computer science, a shared object like music on mySpace.com, communication on kommunikationsforum.dk or growing up rural on bondeknold.com. Normally I would expect every self-organizing web community to be exclusively differentiated and organized around a relatively narrow thematic code, but facebook doesn’t seem to work that way. Or does it?

Where other 2.0 apps organize around differentated themes, they don’t show off the users’ social capital to users that are not a part of your immidiate network. An intriguing paper in the Journal of Computer Mediated Communication by Nicole Ellison et al. show that there is a connection between facebook use and social capital among students at the Michigan State University. Ellison’s study reveals a crucial clue to understanding what facebook does for me: it shows off my social capital (friendly connections) to a wide audience.

Facebook is to social capital what bling is to money. In stead of showing off your riches, it shows off how well connected you are. They even made little accessory apps to put on your profile to add a little extra ice. My favorite is called the ‘Friend Wheel‘ and it shows acircular ego network model as proposed by Duncan Watts and Steven Strogatz in Watts’ now infamous book ‘Six Degrees - The Science of a Connected Age‘. Here is my current friend wheel bling:

Friend Wheel - bling!

Blue: People I grew up with
Turquoise: High School friends
Green University alumni
Yellow: Work colleagues
Red: Miscellaneous aquantances

Your friends are iced out bling and chrome rims on a big ass SUV!

2nd blog post and still no serious response..

.. this is beginning to look like a pattern. It can’t be that I’m not interesting enough to keep the world in awe while waiting for my next post, so is it the medium? The layout I still haven’t jazzed up?

Well thank you to my German friend Emil who commented on my last post. Even though he wears a thong in public.

I’m online!

Finally after more than a year of beating around the bush I got my spanking new Wordpress 2.3 up and running. Maybe someone will be reading it sometime by the end of the next decade…

The only comment is by the ‘Wordpress guy’. Who is he, anyway?!