It's 2008. Where's my flying car? RSS 2.0
 Monday, September 22, 2003

This article on news.com is just beyond belief. Mr. Cancilla, exactly how open is OS/400 as per your definition?

Monday, September 22, 2003 10:39:29 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [4] - Trackback
Other Stuff

I am sitting here right outside the conference venue of the JAOO Conference in Aarhus in Denmark, which kicks of the Fall/Winter 2003 conference season for me. I am speaking about Service Oriented Architectures and Web Services in my first talk and will drill down on Layers, Tiers, and Services in my second talk. Unfortunately the time slots are just 45 minutes and I just can't get myself to cut too much of the content .... as usual. Later in the week, I'll go to the BASTA! conference in Frankfurt where I won't speak, but want to check out how Jörg, Achim and Michael are doing and talk to a couple of folks there.

Anyways, after my vacation and a week of orientation on what to do next, I am back in business. And after "the summer of the blog engine", I'll go back to focus more on architectural topics -- including here.

Monday, September 22, 2003 2:13:33 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Blog | Talks
 Tuesday, September 16, 2003

The new newtelligence homepage now runs on top of it. In fact, there are a couple of features like the nested categories and the whole localization story that only made it into the blog engine, because we wanted to use dasBlog for that purpose as well.

Tuesday, September 16, 2003 4:51:48 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
dasBlog
 Monday, September 15, 2003

The temples of the old Khmer empires in Angkor (Siem Reap) in Cambodia are truly amazing and a must see for anyone interested in ancient cultures. (Although they are actually medieval on the Western time scale considering the time they were built – between 900AD and 1300AD). The picture shows the most famous and best preserved temple, Angkor Wat, which can only be compared in terms of overall scale and work effort to the great Cheops pyramid in Giza. Angkor Wat is the biggest religious site on the planet.

 

I don’t even know where to start writing about how impressive the Angkor sites are and I am certainly not the least bit qualified to describe them properly, so the best is for you to check this very informative guide to the Angkor monuments.

 

In Siem Reap we stayed (luckily) at one of the two best hotels in town, at the Sofitel, which was US$100 a night, but which I can highly recommend if you want to avoid a major culture shock. Cambodia is one of the poorest countries in the world and while Siem Reap doesn’t immediately reflect this, staying at the Sofitel is certainly the best thing a western tourist can do who is not of the adventurer/backpacker type. I spoke to a Swiss tour organizer who specializes in Cambodia tours and he told me that he consolidated his hotel list to only 4 hotels in Siem Reap and the Sofitel easily tops his favorites list – and it’s not the most expensive one. In general, Siem Reap is not a very cheap place to go to considering all cost, but it’s all money well spent if you consider that tourism is the primary source of income and the economic engine for literally hundreds of  thousand of people in the Siem Reap region and that Angkor is still mostly a destination for “those who know”.

 

The entry fee for all of the Angkor sites is US$20 per day and person or US$60 for a three day pass. A good local tour guide and a taxi driver will cost you between US$30 and US$40 per day. You’ll need both and you shouldn’t try to explore the sites just with a book – the guides speak good English (a German speaking guide will ask US$10/day more) and are usually very well educated about the sites and they will fill you in with all the religious background and legends that you will need to understand to appreciate the art. Food can be very cheap (less than US$1 for a meal) if you are one of the daring types with a strong stomach or between US$10 and US$30 at a hotel or at the very few proper restaurants, if you are such a civilization wimp as I am.

 

What you definitely need is lots of sun-block, anti-mosquito spray, light clothes and a hat. Even in the rain season (which is now) it’s very hot around noon time and the humidity is easily at >90%. But that’s not so different from Cairo ;)

Monday, September 15, 2003 3:36:01 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] - Trackback
Cambodia
 Sunday, September 14, 2003

Hey, Don! Your "API of the day" entries make me wonder whether you got bored w/ XML. Isn't this counter revolutionary activity?

I actually checked twice whether I am looking at the right date ;)

+1 on MkParseDisplayName(Ex)

 

 

Sunday, September 14, 2003 10:27:28 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
COM

I am safely back from my Asia tour and Patricia and I have seen lots of very cool places and I am sure going to post some pictures today and tomorrow.  The one thing that didn’t really work well for me was Internet access so I was essentially offline for the last two weeks. So, first things first, below you’ll finally find the download links for the demos of my talks in Malaysia.

Download: FlightsRUs.zip
Download: newtelligenceSDK-2-21-3239-0.zip
Download: NorthwindTechEdMalaysia.zip

Sunday, September 14, 2003 9:43:05 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] - Trackback
TechEd Malaysia | Travel

I have to admit that I was a bit hesitant when Patricia came up with the idea to go to Vietnam on the “leisure-loop” of our South-East Asia trip. The country is, of course, still controlled by a socialist party and is even still “Socialist Republic”, and I really knew very little about Vietnam except for the horrible historic events of the 1960s and 1970s. Of course I was absolutely wrong being concerned about our safety and Ho Chi Minh City isn’t socialistically dull and boring, at all. In fact, it’s great fun!

DungTuangWe met Dung (right) and Tuang (on the left) at a street corner where they asked us whether we wanted to take a tour on their bike-carts. One hour per person for $3 US. Although Vietnam does of course have a proper local currency (the exchange rate is about 15,500.00 VND for 1 USD), everything can be paid for in U.S. Dollars and that’s actually the preferred way of payment. In fact, $3 USD/hr is relatively expensive already considering that locals can get a full meal for less than 30 cents and that you can buy 2.5 liters of (surprisingly good) local draught beer for about 30,000 VND if you (a) find the right place and (b) have local people with you as we did.

However … Dung and Tuang’s services are easily worth their money. They are very friendly (it seems like any other Vietnamese person you could meet in the streets of HCMC is like that), they speak OK-enough English for a conversation and for them to explain a couple of things here and there and of course they know the places to go. But their most amazing skill is navigating through the traffic chaos of Ho Chi Minh City. In “HCMC”, you see a couple of cars here and there, but the streets are dominated by thousands of quadrillion-bazillons of small motorbikes. And of course, nobody pays any close attention to traffic rules (if there are any), but mysteriously, it just works. Even if you go with a slow bike-cart against a one-way street smack in the middle of the road, the traffic flows magically around you and you never get a feeling of being in danger. The secret seems to be that everyone drives very slowly and everyone seems very alert. I would think that the average speed in traffic is about 25-30 km/h. Dung and Tuang took us around for about 6 hours for the money equivalent of 3 rollercoaster-rides at the “Kirmes” in Düsseldorf complete with the entire thrill but a lot more fun.

What becomes very apparent even as you approach the city-center from the airport is that all that seems left of the “Socialist Republic” are the occasional paroles on street posters, but otherwise the market rules. We were told that it’s very different outside the two big cities Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi and that the agricultural collectives are still the common organization of work there, but there’s no trace of what I think is a “Socialist Republic”, of course having East Germany in mind as an example. Quite to the contrary, Saigon (you will find the old name used much more frequently than “Ho Chi Minh City”; “Sai Gon” is in fact the name of the central 1st district) is a very colorful and vibrant city with a lot of very visible entrepreneurial spirit.

While it seems to be a fun place to be (I spoke to an English guy who went there for a three day trip, went home, quit his job and is now there for 9 months already), don’t expect too much great sightseeing experiences. There are a couple of things to see, but nothing too spectacular. “The War Remnants Museum” on the premises of the old U.S. embassy (from which the last U.S. troops were evacuated by swarms of helicopters), shows a couple of U.S. weapons that were left behind, including the obvious Huey Chopper, an F-5 fighter, a couple of tanks and all sorts of short range missiles. The most horrible two weapons on display are two “daisy cutters” – 7 ton fuel-bombs that annihilate all life within a 500m radius of their point of detonation. The most horrible pictures on display in the adjacent exhibitions halls are those that illustrate the short and long-term effects of the infamous “Agent Orange” on people. Interestingly enough, the rest of the exhibition – except some obvious propaganda in a hall illustrating the support of the world for Vietnam in the times of war – is mostly from U.S. publication sources and photographers, which gives the exhibition some (strange) balance. The entrance fee is 10,000 VND per person.

Otherwise, Saigon is a very interesting and friendly place to explore if you have two or three days while in South East Asia. The Vietnamese people have long understood what the Dollar and Euros are not only worth to them but also to you so don’t expect it to be very cheap. Saigon seems more expensive than, for instance, Bangkok and is much less developed at the same time. However, just from feeling much less “westernized” than any of the other Asian cities that I’ve been to, it draws its appeal.

Sunday, September 14, 2003 9:34:18 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] - Trackback
Vietnam
 Monday, September 01, 2003
Samples from TechEd Malaysia should be posted by the end of this week due to lack of Internet access.
Monday, September 01, 2003 2:35:21 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] - Trackback
TechEd Malaysia
 Thursday, August 28, 2003

With TechEd Malaysia done, Patricia and I now have a bit more than 2 weeks of vacation! Today we fly to Saigon (Vietnam) and tomorrow from there for 4 days to Siem Reap (Cambodia) to see the temples of the sunken capital of the Khmer empire in Angkor. Then we’ll fly back to Thailand to spend 1 ½ weeks in a beach resort and finally we fly home after another one night stop in Bangkok. This is going to be great fun.

Thursday, August 28, 2003 6:38:13 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [6] - Trackback
Other Stuff
 Wednesday, August 27, 2003

Although we had an excessive first night here in Kuala Lumpur (getting strangers drunk on arrival seems to be some sort of tradition around here), that wasn't the reason for me showing up 15 minutes late for my first talk about "Building Distributed .NET Applications" this morning at 9:00am (then 9:15am) here at TechEd Malaysia. The notification about session slot change somehow either just didn't find its way into my inbox or it fell victim to the Sobig.F mail sweeping. Whatever happened... it seems all people in a full room did indeed patiently wait for me while I rushed from the hotel to the session room. Thank you! Being late to a session at a conference was definitely a (bad) "first" for me and is doubleplusungood to happen to a German. The session ended up going really well and I will post the related samples tomorrow together with the sample for the session on aspects.

The second session was a fun chalk talk with Tim Huckaby about the same topic area. As the lead example for a loosely-coupled, distributed system I used dasBlog and its interactions with other blog engines and moved on to explain how the architectural mesaures taken there could be used for more "traditional" enterprise software scenarios. Core message: asynchronous is good!

Wednesday, August 27, 2003 2:05:49 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [1] - Trackback
TechEd Malaysia
 Thursday, August 21, 2003

The Sobig.F worm is hitting massively. My inbox. While we have all shields up at newtelligence for virus-protection, a bunch of people who have my email in their contacts obviously don't. Since yesterday evening I had to clean out at least 300-400 mails from my inbox that were generated by the worm. By average, I am currently getting a (formerly, pre-scan) infected email every 4-5 minutes. It's f***ing annoying.

Thursday, August 21, 2003 5:15:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [3] - Trackback
Other Stuff
 Wednesday, August 20, 2003

While I wasn't looking, Doug Purdy, who is the PM for the team in charge of the XmlSerializer has posted this little cryptic answer to my initial question:

String serializedDateTime = XmlConvert.ToString( someDateTime );

DateTime deserializedDateTime = XmlConvert.ToDateTime( serializedDateTime );

What Doug is showing is really what the serializer is doing with dates under the hood and that I am incorrectly blaming the XmlSerializer for the lack of UTC support. [XmlConvert.ToString() also does nothing more than calling DateTime.ToString() with the appropriate format string]. As I was already saying in yesterday's post, but what I want to make a bit clearer here again is that the actual problem is the lack of time-zone awareness in DateTime.

So the proper thing more me to do is to ask the base-class library team for time-zone support in the base-class library for Whidbey so that Doug can fix this for us ;)

Wednesday, August 20, 2003 6:43:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Comments [2] - Trackback
XML | CLR
Stuff
About the author/Disclaimer

The content of this site are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway. In addition, my thoughts and opinions often change, and as a weblog is intended to provide a semi-permanent point in time snapshot you should not consider out of date posts to reflect my current thoughts and opinions.

© Copyright 2008
Clemens Vasters
Sign In
Statistics
Total Posts: 717
This Year: 11
This Month: 2
This Week: 1
Comments: 1219
Themes
Pick a theme:
All Content © 2008, Clemens Vasters
DasBlog theme 'Business' created by Christoph De Baene (delarou)