Thanks to everyone one who attended my session at the Leeds SQL User group on Visual Studio Database Edition and to UPCO for hosting the event.
The slide stack is available on the Black Marble web site
The random thoughts of Richard Fennell on technology and software development
Thanks to everyone one who attended my session at the Leeds SQL User group on Visual Studio Database Edition and to UPCO for hosting the event.
The slide stack is available on the Black Marble web site
It really good to see so many submissions for the DDD7, and many new names, always a good sign of a the community working well.
I just got round to putting one in myself on integrating testing into MSBuild.
There is still time for more though. So have a think and put in a session proposal – trust me it is great fun.
For those who are interested, I am speaking on Visual Studio for Database Professionals at the Leeds SQL user group on the 16th July. This is a free event, for more details see the event web site.
Thanks to everyone who attended my session on DataDude in Edinburgh yesterday. I hope you found it useful. For those based in Yorkshire I will be doing the same session for the local SQL user group on the 16th July.
The slides I used yesterday were virtually identical to the ones I used at SQLBits II and can be found on our server. The only major change was a bit about yesterdays announcement of the GDR release that I wrote on the train up after watching the Channel9 video – but Gert’s blog is a better source information for this.
I will be speaking on Visual Studio for Database Professionals to the Scottish SQL usergroup on the 4th June in Edinburgh.
Update The event booking site is now available at http://www.sqlserverfaq.com/?eid=115
The details are out the for VBug event I am speaking at, it is going to be at The Castlegate, Melbourne Street, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 2JQ
Hope to see you there.
I will be speaking at the Irish Microsoft Technology Conference in early April on the Business Intelligence features in SQL 2008.
I also just found out my Continuous Integration session at Developer Day Scotland has been successful in the vote, thanks to everyone who voted for it.
In a change from the usual venue in Leeds, the next meeting of the Extreme Programming club will be at Black Marble’s office in Bradford.
I will be giving a updated version of my DDD4 presentation on Cruise Control .NET.
The fun starts a 7pm on Wednesday the 12th of March, it is free and open to all, see you there.
Just come out of an interesting set of round table events for ‘community influencers’ at TechEd. These are people who are active in both the online and face-to-face communities from all round Europe (and Australia – the reach of TechEd Europe!) attended.
In the sessions I went to the general discussion was on the point I posted about a few weeks ago and that had been a running conversions on a number of UK blogs. I was refeshing (or sad?) to find the problems we have seen at home over attendance are the same around Europe:
As you would expect there is no single answer, and for most ideas there was someone to say ‘we tried that and it did not work for us’. However, it did come out that things that fail for one group work for others – there is no silver bullet. So try anything and everything to get people engaged.
A general it was felt ‘marketing presentations’ do not draw people in, neither do events that cover what can be found on-line. Most people agreed that events, maybe in a panel or round table format, that provide real world experience or ‘war stories’ as I call them are often the ones that get the most interest. Of cause it helps if the speaker presents in an engaging style, but this is mitigated if you can get the whole room involved.
From my experience some of the most interesting community events have been to are technology agnostic and focus on general development for project management issues, notably in a group workshop style. Such as those at the Extreme Programming club, but even with this interesting content this group has struggled for number. As I said before the fact I like technology agnostic groups, as a NET developer I know there is much I can learn from Java developers and vice-versa, does not mean that this is right for all.
There was an underlying discussion of how many people in the industry were looking to the community as a means to professional development, as opposed to IT being just a job that ended at 5pm. Moving the latter group into being hard – can you engage people who have lost the ‘joy for their career’?
I am sure this pre conference event will generate some online activity, keep an eye out for it.