Welcome 2011
Things that happened in 2010
-
MIX10 was absolutely fantastic. Read
my report of MIX10
to see why.
-
The
dotnet Cologne 2010, the community conference organized by the
.NET user group Köln
and my own group
Bonn-to-Code.Net
became an even bigger success than I dared to dream of.
-
There was a huge discrepancy between the efforts by
Microsoft to support .NET user groups to organize
public live streaming events of the PDC keynote
(the dotnet Cologne team joined forces with
netug Niederrhein
to organize the
PDCologne) and the actual content of the keynote. The reaction of
the audience at our event was “meh” and even worse I
seriously doubt we’ll ever get that number of people to
such an event (which on top of that suffered from
technical difficulties beyond our control).
- What definitely would have deserved the public live streaming event treatment was the Silverlight Firestarter (aka “Silverlight Damage Control”) event. And maybe we would have thought about organizing something if it weren’t for the “burned earth” left by the PDC keynote. Anyway, the stuff shown at the firestarter keynote was the topic of conversations among colleagues days later (“did you see that? oh yeah, that was seriously cool”).
Things that I have learned/observed/noticed in 2010
-
In the long run, there’s a huge difference between “It
works pretty well” and “it just works and I never have to
think about it”. I had to get rid of my USB graphics
adapter powering the third monitor (read about it in
this blog post). Various small issues (desktop icons
sometimes moving their positions after a reboot
for no apparent reasons, at least one game I couldn’t get
run at all, all three monitors
sometimes simply refusing to wake up after
standby) finally made me buy a PCIe 1x graphics adapter.
If you’re interested: The combination of a NVIDIA GTX 460
and a GT 220 is running in “don’t make me think” mode for
a couple of months now.
-
PowerPoint 2010 is a seriously cool piece
of software. Not only the new hardware-accelerated
effects, but also features like built-in background
removal and picture processing (which in many cases are
simply “good enough” and save a lot of time) or the smart
guides.
-
Outlook 2010 crashes on me a lot. I
haven’t been successful in reproducing these crashes, they
just happen when every couple of days on different
occasions (only thing in common: I clicked something in
the main window – yeah, very helpful observation)
-
Visual Studio 2010 reminds me of Visual
Studio 2005 before SP1, which is actually not a good thing
to say about a piece of software. I think it’s telling
that Microsoft’s message regarding the beta of SP1 has
been different from earlier service pack betas (promising
an upgrade path for a beta to the RTM sounds to me like
“please, please use it NOW!”).
- I have a love/hate relationship with ReSharper. I don’t want to develop without it, but at the same time I can’t fail to notice that ReSharper is taking a heavy toll in terms of performance and sometimes stability.
Things I’m looking forward to in 2011
-
Obviously, the
dotnet Cologne 2011. We already have been able to score some big name
sponsors (Microsoft, Intel), but
we’re still looking for more sponsors. And be assured that we’ll make sure that our partners
get the most out of their contribution, regardless of how
big or small.
- MIX11, period.
- Silverlight 5 is going to be great. The only thing I’m a bit nervous about is that I still haven’t read anything official on whether C# next version’s async/await will be in it. Leaving that out would be really stupid considering the end-of-2011 release of SL5 (moving the next release way into the future).