Scott Hanselman

Wireless Blogging in SFO on the way to HKG on the way to KUL

August 21, 2003 Comment on this post [1] Posted in TechEd | Speaking | Gaming
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What was once science-fiction is now commonplace.  I'm blogging this entry from the lounge in the international terminal in SFO on the way to TechEd Malaysia.  There's T-Mobile hotspots everywhere for a very reasonable $6 a hour.  I'm even three floors down next to the gate with great coverage.  NetStumbler says there are six access points within a few hundred meters and 5 other laptop fools online with me.  I'm VPN'ed into work via IPsec, chatting with my boss over MSN Messenger, syncronizing Outlook 2003's offline Exchange store with the mothershop and I've got an online game of Rise of Nations running the background.  All on a laptop with a 1600x1200 (120dpi) screen that only weight about 6 pounds.

Madness my friends.  Madness if you don't realize how far we've come.  Of course, I needed a B.S. in Software Engineering to make it all happen (considering how hard it was just to get this F'ing Wireless card to work.   BUT, regardless.  Amazing. 

So, I took a picture of my wife and I with a Casio Exilim, docked it, hooked up the USB, it becomes the Z: drive (no driver installation!) and here's the result: 

A picture named CIMG0230 (Small).JPG

More to come, folks.

About Scott

Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.

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Roshambo and Rise of Nations

August 19, 2003 Comment on this post [0] Posted in Gaming | Africa
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If you've every played Age of Empires or the new Rise of Nations, you've probably realized by now that they are just really elaborate examples of Rock-Paper-Scissors (Pikeman beats Knight, Knight beats Footman, Footman beats Pikeman...). 

Even though I know this - as a 29 year old man I can intellectualize this - but I still stayed up until midnight last night playing International Roshambo (also known as Rise of Nations).  Dammit if it isn't a fantastic game.  I'm not even a big gamer, but the level of detail and thought put into this game is ridiculous. 

Of course, I play the Bantu (my wife is Zimbabwean Ndebele, a Bantu tribe) as they kick the most butt.

About Scott

Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.

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New NetPing from Jeff Key

August 19, 2003 Comment on this post [0] Posted in Web Services | ASP.NET
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Jeff Key has updated NetPing.  NetPing is one of the primary examples I use when teaching newbies C#.  It's a nice utility that everyone can easily understand.  It's full of nice examples of Threading, WinForms, etc. 

It's also a cool addition to utils collections for the IT wonk.  He's updated it to include launching Remote Desktop, launch Computer Management and NetworkDriveInfo (another nice util).

About Scott

Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.

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PDC and Birds of a Feather - Host your own technical session!

August 18, 2003 Comment on this post [0] Posted in Speaking | PDC | XML
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This a very clever idea - an opportunity for a attendees of PDC to host a session on topics of their own choosing.

BoF sessions will be held on Sunday, October 26th from 6PM – 9PM and on Monday, October 27th and Tuesday, October 28th from 8PM – 11PM.  To propose a BoF session, please visit the registration form hosted by International .NET Association's (INETA) http://www.ineta.org/bof. At this site, you will be able to propose a topic as well as view and vote on topics proposed by other attendees.  Periodically, a committee consisting of INETA members and Microsoft employees will review the topics and select sessions for the conference.  Final BoF sessions will also be posted through CommNet so that when you are selecting you want to attend, you can also begin planning which BoFs you would like to attend.

About Scott

Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.

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The end of an era...and the beginning of a new computer for me...

August 16, 2003 Comment on this post [4] Posted in Bugs
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I mentioned a little bit ago that I walked in my college graduation (had a great C# graduation cake).  They let you walk if you have only a few credits left, and I had to take one additonal three credit class in order to get my diploma.  Today I finished the final in my one summer class, and I came home and put Discrete Mathematics (fifth edition) on my shelf with about 30 computer science books and I realized that I have NO HOMEWORK.  This may seem like a silly thought to you, but if you count the first 12 years of school, and 11 year B.S. degree, I've had homework pretty consistantly for the last 23 years.  To wake up tommorow and have no homework is crazy madness.  Of course, I'll continue to stay up all night and mess with Mono and run ILDASM on everything in sight, but I just won't received a grade.

So, I updated my resume, and happily moved the Education section up (it had been hidden before) as I am now a "degreed computer scientist" with no homework!

In celebration I upgraded my PC.  The original plan was to go all-out and pick up an AlienWare or a FalconNW and do the whole $3000 PC thing. 

Segue: The last time I spent $3K on a PC was in 1991 when I picked up a sweet 486DX/33 (that's right, DX, baby!) with 8 Megs of RAM and a 210 Maxtor HD.  I promptly installed DRDOS, Stacker'ed the HD to a glorious 400+megs and installed DesqView.

Well, the wife promptly (and wisely) nixed the new PC idea, but OK'ed a trip to Fry's for parts.  I picked up a Pentium4 3Ghz with Hyperthreading, and a great new Intel Motherboard, with a gig of Dual Channel RAM.  I moved my 45 gig C: drive in for Windows XP (I'll move to Win2k3 when there's more drivers), dropped in my data array (I keep all my data on two RAID Mirrored 20 gig drivers) and my 400 odd gigs of Firewire drives (seriously, get on the Firewire bandwagon...it's so much faster to installed VS.NET and other CDs when everything is on a Firewire drive as a mountable ISO image!) and a new NVidia 5200 FX Dual-Head (multi-monitor, it's not just a suggestion, it's the law).  I also put in my DVD, my CD/RW (the new Nero Ultra software suite is unquestionably the greatest value in software today, full stop), my AverMedia USB TV Tuner (you just can't have two monitors if you can't watch TV in a Window while dual-screen debugging).  

I put the whole thing together for $824.  Amazing.  I also ordered some custom front mounted Firewire and USB 2.0 ports (There are a lot of internal motherboard mounted ports that a lot of us leave unused!)  With these new ports I'll have 6 Firewire ports, and 8 USB ports.

Holy crap my computer is fast.  Even with a crappy C: drive, it's fast.  Even better, the motherboard has Serial ATA RAID on the board.  I figure if I upgrade the C: with a couple striped drives (probably two of these 10,000 RPM babies), I'd probably see a 4x I/O increase, which is crazy since the beast goes from zero to the deskop in 15 seconds flat. 

So much hardware, so little time...maybe now I'll have the time to tinker.

About Scott

Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.

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Disclaimer: The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.