Ticket To Ride

by Erik Lane 27. February 2007 15:14

I listen to Scott Hanselman's podcast, Hanselminutes.  A few weeks ago he did a show on Board Gaming for Programmers.  He had Chris Brooks on the show with him and mentioned playing games with his kids.  Julie and I love playing board games with our kids.  Until we bought Ticket To Ride our favorite was a classic board game, Hotels, my wife has had since she was kid.

One negative to classic board games is that someone normally exits the game early on and has to wait around for everyone to finish.  Ticket To Ride is fun for everyone until the very end.  The kids love it and we love it too.  I'm sure we'll be looking into other games like this in the future.

My wife beat me to the punch and has a better write up on it.

Classic ASP.NET

by Erik Lane 27. February 2007 14:44

From the famous words of Ferris Bueller

"Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."

That's right, things move pretty fast in life but in terms of web development it screams!  I was reading AjaxPatterns.org about DotNet Ajax Framworks and found this quote regarding the Ajaxium:

"...sites powered by Ajaxium remain accessible to all search engines and old browsers due to an automatic and silent degradation to the classic ASP.NET."

 I'm still using "classic" to refer to ASP 3.0.  When did ASP.NET become "classic"?  I guess the answer is now.

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Close but no Zune

by Erik Lane 27. February 2007 14:21

I guessed correct in Caleb's contest for a new Zune.  According to the picture below I had a 6.5% chance of winning....apparently that wasn't good enough.

What's in your Firefox?

by Erik Lane 20. February 2007 13:48
I've only begun to discover the greatness of the Firefox browser but I thought I would mention some of the add-ons/extensions that I use. Yex pointed me to Firebug (Dave gives it some love too) and it looks like Scott Water has some cool ones loaded up that I'll need to check out as well. If you've got a "can't miss" extension that I should take look-see at then please shout it out.

Roboform - I've blogged about the greatness of Roboform before.  Now I can use it in Firefox.

Del.icio.us - This one I recently installed and going to give bookmarking a shot.  So far so good.

Firebug - So far it is pretty impressive.  I've saved a couple of sites that I need to view on how to really use it.  Thanks to my Del.icio.us extension, it was a breeze.

GMail Manager - EVERY e-mail account I have goes through my Gmail account.  This little plug-in replaces GMail Notifier.  Sweet Action!

IE Tab - A must have for any web developer.  Need to see what your work looks like in IE?  Open it up in an IE Tab and you're good-to-go.  You can also set it up to open all sites from a specific domain to automatically open in an IE Tab....can you say Sharepoint?

Live HTTP Headers - This is replaces a dear friend of mine ieHTTPheaders.  Again, something that most web developers could use.

Tab Mix Plus - This little baby put me over the fence into the Firefox crowd.  Puts you in full control over your tabs.

Web Developer - Needless to say, this is a great extension and I use it many times during the day.  The table and CSS pieces are enough to keep me around.

Also, I use the Classic Compact theme.

If you've got a sweet add-on I should look at, please let me know.

 Giddy Up!

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VirtualPC 2007 - Free Download

by Erik Lane 20. February 2007 07:19

As everyone has seen, VirtualPC 2007 has been released and it is FREE!

I've not used VPC yet.  I guess I've not seen a need for it on my local machine (or maybe I don't understand the need for it yet).  I've been wanting to install Vista; I am afraid to to do a full blown upgrade right now and purchasing a new hard drive just for a new OS is a little extreme for me.  Maybe VPC is what I'm looking for.

[via Christopher Steen, via Heath Stewart]

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Worst Sports Headline Ever!?

by Erik Lane 14. February 2007 08:44

My wife just forwarded me this from a friend of ours (Scott, provide me with a link and I'll add it).

"Chargers prepare to reload after Schott fired."

Did anyone happen to see this up on the ESPN site?  He said he saw it this morning but it's down now.  Wowsers!

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Categories: General Musings

I've Finally Made the Switch to Firefox

by Erik Lane 13. February 2007 17:25

I may be one of the last developer types to make the move to the Firefox browser.  Most everyone I know uses Firefox and has for a long time.  I initially tried when it first came out but I didn't see anything in it that I didn't already have in SlimBrowser or Maxthon.  Plus, it was missing the two things I needed for my everyday browsing needs.  I read about the web developer extensions; I tried again.  The extensions where cool and useful but for my everyday browsing it was still missing the two key things I had grown dependent on in Maxthon.  If Firefox wanted me as a customer then it had to deliver those two items.

The two things?

  • Tab Management
  • URL Aliases

Through the years of using SlimBrowser and Maxthon I got spoiled by having the ability to tell the browser when to use a new tab, when to focus a tab, when to use the same tab, etc.  I also was spoiled at typing "gl" or "ng" in the address bar to go to Google or Newsgator.  Type in "wx 21230" and it would pull up Accuweather.com for my zipcode.  These were two things that I couldn't find out how to do (easily) so I didn't make the switch.

Jump forward to about 3 weeks ago.  I started my new contract and I'm using a machine provided by the client.  They've locked down the browser so there is nothing you can do but have the Intranet as the startup page.  I'm a blank page kind of guy myself and it's hard to change.  I installed Maxthon2 but since it uses the Internet Explorer engine I couldn't change the homepage there either.  I decided to give Firefox a shot, again.  Firefox worked and so I was able to get back to a clean starting page every time I opened up my browser.  Since Firefox was able to provide me this option, I decided I was going to put in some real effort and hunt down any possibility for me to get the tab management and URL Alias support I so desperately needed.

BINGO!

The URL alias functions was the first to get cleared up.  Firefox calls it "Bookmark Keywords".  In the property of every Bookmark you can set a keyword for it.  Type that keyword in the address bar and off you go.  One down and one to go.  The tab management support I was looking for was a bit trickier.  I sifted through a few different extensions that dealt with tabs to finally settle on TabMixPlus.  This nifty extensions is Tab Management on steroids - so many options and provides the flexibility I was looking for.  Good stuff!

I'm now a Firefox convert.  I've been using Firefox for about 3 weeks as my primary browser and I've found it more useful that I ever thought a browser could be.  I've also come to appreciate its simplicity just like I have in Textpad.  I'll go through my current setup and maybe others would be willing to chime in on theirs as well.

Giddy Up!

ps.  If you've been waiting on a review of Maxthon2, I'm sorry but it will be shelved until further notice.  :-)

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Where Does Caleb Work?

by Erik Lane 9. February 2007 01:30

Caleb Jenkins is giving away a Zune if you can guess where he works now.  My guess is Improving Enterprises, LLC.  So, there you have my guess.  If you want, please click through to his post so I can get an extra chance put in the drawing.

Giddy Up!

Some (more) Cool ReSharper News

by Erik Lane 7. February 2007 06:30

If you don't subscribe to the JetBrains .NET Tools Blog then you've been missing a couple of announcements that I'll gladly share with you here.  :-)

  1. JetBrains is now offering a Personal Developer License for ReSharper at $149.  This is not as good as the $99 special but its still at a price that is reasonable for the individual developer.
  2. Joe White is blogging 31 Days of ReSharper.  If you've run through the trial and still not sure what it offers then keep an eye on Joe's ReSharper Category.  He's already up to day 7 and doing a really great job of giving examples and explaining some of the "must have" features that ReSharper provides.  Examples:  The Gray and Red Squiggly, The Color Bar and The Green Box, and Code Formatting.  Those are three, easy to see and hard to live without, features of ReSharper that get you from the start.  There is a lot more to it so I'm hopeful that he'll keep up the great work.

Giddy Up!

 

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Have Visual Studio 2005 Generate Your Local Resources

by Erik Lane 4. February 2007 08:14

Thanks to ScottGu I saved some time creating my local resource files.  I found this post of his that gives some really great resources on Localization in ASP.NET 2.0 (really worth the read).  The little nugget that saved me some time is down in the comments:

"If you are using VS 2005, you can use the "Generate Local Resources" option within the Tools menu to auto-generate the .resx files for resources."

Giddy Up!

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