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22Oct/080

Apple’s quality center puts the B in Dumn

No, it's not a typo at all. Apparently, Apple forgot the "B" key in their new Macbook laptops. So much for your high quality standards Steve Jobs...

14Oct/081

Windows 7 goes official

That's right, this will after all be the official name of the next Windows version. According to Mike Nash on the Windows Vista blog, Microsoft is sticking with the simple name Windows 7, therefore cutting with the "aspirational monikers" that they have used in the past like Windows XP or Vista.

The same person writes that this is the seventh release of Windows, hence the naming Windows 7.

Another source tells us that a pre-beta version of this new Windows will be distributed at the Professional Developer Conference, set to take place on Los Angeles on October 27th.

10Oct/080

A personal view at Firefox vs. Chrome

So, really, now that the hype is over, what is the browser of choice? Well, the out of the box answer for me is Firefox but let's have a deeper look at the contest shall we?

What plays in favour of Google Chrome?
I for one really enjoyed the looks. It has a clean and sleek interface without your regular toolbar menus and without a caption bar. I find this amazing. It's the first browser that was designed with true usability in mind regarding the menu paraphernalia. The guys at Google really are being serious about seeing websites as actual applications, and proof of that is the fact that you can create "application links". This also plays in Chrome's favour in my opinion. There are pages that I simply have open at all times and ones that I have to be able to access quickly; Google Chrome with this feature allows me to run GMail (or any other website) as a separate window, simply by leaving an icon on my desktop. This separate window is also special, it has kind of usability on steroids since it has no menu whatsoever. It does have a caption, which in this case is good because I might want to move the window around while not maximized.

Ok, now that we're done talking about the user interface, we go on to the actual features. For starters, let's face it: Google Chrome is fast. Actually, it feels faster than Firefox as far as browsing is concerned. How do they achieve it? I'm not exactly sure and if my suspicions are right, you can probably achieve the same effect with FasterFox or with a properly configured Opera, but I'm dealing with the facts here and that is that Chrome feels fast.

4Oct/082

Microsoft Dreamway 2008 – Steve Ballmer

Howdy my faithful readers.

Today I am here to talk about Microsoft Dreamway. My goal is to outline what I have learned from it and how much of a great experience that it was.

First off, I was the very first MSP to arrive there, so I checked myself in and waited around for more people to come. Finally more and more people started coming and another MSP came, Vânia. "Okay... what to do now? Let's get coffee." . After messing around with the map, we finally figured out where the foyer was and where we were meant to eat cookies(!) and get our morning coffee.

After waiting for a while longer, more and more Student Partners started showing up and eventually the speeches started. The first one, with Pedro Rosa, was as usually quite good and before we knew it, we were having coffee again on the morning Coffee Break. Then off to speeches again, this time with Nuno Godinho; a speech on creating rich applications with Silverlight. Besides the fact that Nuno lost the notion of time on both of his speeches, they were quite helpful and inspiring. I had been wanting to try Silverlight for a while now and this was just the spark to get it going. Then came the speech about Visual Studio, which (I'm sorry but) it was the less attractive one, even if I work with Visual Studio on almost a daily basis.

And then it was time to lunch. They served some "weird" thing with codfish and ... stuff BUT, the desserts were delicious so all in all, despite having to stand during the whole thing, it wasn't so bad.

Stuffed up and cosy and the moment of the day arrived: Steve Ballmer's keynote speech. Massive crowd waiting at the doors of the main auditorium and when we were finally allowed in, it looked like they were offering free candy on the inside! Everyone wanted in, and lucky me, I got a place right on the second row :D (yeah, the original plan was to catch a drop of Steve's saliva and sell it on eBay afterwards , but that just didn't happen... :( bummer!). Turns out that the first speaker wasn't really Steve Ballmer but Miguel Caldas, who was also going to give a keynote speech but on Internet Explorer 8.

*sigh*

Don't take me wrong, Miguel was, to say the least, captivating, enthusiastic and funny: the perfect mixture in a speaker, so despite us all being fooled into thinking that we were going to be hearing from Steve first, it was quite good to hear all about IE8. As Miguel said: on IE8, Microsoft is finally caring about standards and about developers. We all know how much of a pain in the rear it is to develop something that looks the same in Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera and Safari (...and some other browsers out there :P like Miguel said - clearly talking about Chrome).

After a while into Miguel's speech, Steve arrives on the building and he's announced with a quite funky music. This was THE moment of the day and I was enjoying it to the fullest! Steve delivered a fun and objective speech, and I found out how powerful his voice really is :P I bet he wouldn't really need a microphone nor speakers to get his voice to reach to the people back in the last rows. He does talk loud but also very clearly and without much of an accent.

So, about this speech, Steve basically pointed out where we are today and how things are developping at Microsoft, and how things are most likely to look in 10 years from now. He was also suspicious about someone being there to evaluate his IQ, as he kept tripping on one of the LCDs laid in front of him, on the ground :P so he said he "suspected that someone was judging his ability to learn" - you failed Steve. :P

So to cut this post short, afterwards we had the second part about Silverlight, then another coffee break and lastly, Pedro Rosa again, this time talking about Virtual Earth and how it can be used as a base to develop so many interesting and useful things. Definitely something to be looked upon. I still have to know more about the licensing because depending on that, I may be going to use it on a secret ASP .NET project of mine ;) .

In a nutshell: the event was brilliantly organized (some chairs on the foyer and on the lunch-tent wouldn't have hurted though...), I got in for free thanks to being a Microsoft Student Partner so... free education, free food and a free good time with friends... hell yes! I'm all for that! :D

Oh and Steve, thanks for your e-mail address. And yes, I know you have wanted it for a while now, and I've decided to concede: you can come to my place whenever you like. Yes, really. ;)

P.S. Please bring a copy of Windows Cloud!