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Jeremy D. Miller -- The Shade Tree Developer

Under the hood and working with .Net, TDD, Software Design, and Agile Stuff

Announcing the ALT.NET Open Spaces Event

I've been excited for this for quite awhile, and now we can finally talk about it.  Scott Bellware made the first official announcement last night.  In early October, there is going to be a three day event hosted in Austin, Texas.  The theme of the conference is the ALT.NET idea and theme identified by David Laribee this spring.  As Scott mentioned in his post, I'm one of the members of the organizing committee, so feel free to send any questions or suggestions to me via the contact page.

Every so often in blogging discussions I read a line of BS that goes something like "I just use what's best for my project."  Ah, that's nice.  Cheap, useless advice, but nice. So back to where we started, what is best for your project?  Is it the standard MSDN proscribed solution, or is it something else?  What are the "something else" possibilities?  What's coming over the horizon in terms of techniques or technologies that could make development more successful?  What are other development communities doing?  Where can I find out more about these "something else" approaches and tools?  Finding answers to those questions, and the very rare opportunity to interact with fellow developers interested in these very same questions, is exactly the purpose of this conference.

You don't like the ALT.NET moniker?  Think we're arrogant?  Bunch of twaddle?  Fine, show up and add your voice too.

The best part of a conference for me is usually the people you meet and the discussions you have in the hallway between talks.  On the other hand, I'd say that one of the best ways to learn something is to be tagged to present on that topic.  So wouldn't it be nice to have a conference that gives you more chances to interact with other developers and the speakers, and while we're at it, give you the chance to give a talk as well?  If that sounds good to you, you're in luck, because the event is going to follow the Open Spaces format.  If you're going to come, start thinking now about what you want to talk about, and come prepared.  It's an awesome chance to do it in a collegial environment.

I'm pretty excited for the chance to get back to Austin.  I'm threatening some of the New York attendees with a heartburn-inducing tour of my favorite Tex-Mex places.  I'm already scanning the calendars for the Saxon Pub and the Continental Club.

 



Comments

Jim Bonnie said:

Jeremy - I hope I can make my first visit to Austin. Have you found any decent Tex-Mex style places in Fairfield County ?  Not sure if Ole Mole counts...

# July 25, 2007 9:46 AM

hammett said:

Bunch of arrogants! I'll be there!

:-p

# July 25, 2007 10:11 AM

Ben said:

It would be great (although not sure how you would go about it) if the sessions were recorded... Any plans to do so?

# July 25, 2007 10:42 AM

Jeremy D. Miller said:

@Hammet,

Looking forward to meeting you finally.  Next time we've got to go to your place though ;-)

# July 25, 2007 11:36 AM

Jeremy D. Miller said:

@Jim,

No Tex-Mex, but everything else is probably better

# July 25, 2007 11:36 AM

the ‘bee log / The ALT.NET Conference said:

Pingback from  the ‘bee log  / The ALT.NET Conference

# July 25, 2007 11:54 AM

Wendy said:

Bring on the Tex-Mex!

# July 25, 2007 11:57 AM

Sam Gentile said:

Thanks for inviting me (-

# July 25, 2007 1:11 PM

Derik Whittaker said:

Do they have any el Chico's there in Austin?  They had them in Wichita Fall and Dallas area when i was growing up.  I always loved that place.

So Jeremy, does this mean we are going to all go out to eat?

Derik

# July 25, 2007 7:51 PM

ISerializable - Roy Osherove's Blog said:

Scott Bellware recently announced the ALT.NET Conference , which he's organizing.( What's ALT.NET? )

# July 29, 2007 4:50 PM

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About Jeremy D. Miller

Jeremy began his IT career writing "Shadow IT" applications to automate his engineering documentation, then wandered into software development because it looked like more fun. Jeremy previously worked as a systems architect building mission critical supply chain software for a Fortune 100 company and learned agile development practices as a .Net consultant at ThoughtWorks, one of the pioneers of agile development. Jeremy is the author of the open source StructureMap (http://structuremap.sourceforge.net) tool for Dependency Injection with .Net and the forthcoming StoryTeller (http://storyteller.tigris.org) tool for supercharged FIT testing in .Net. Jeremy's thoughts on just about everything software related can be found on his weblog "The Shade Tree Developer" at http://codebetter.com/blogs/jeremy.miller, part of the popular CodeBetter site. Jeremy is a Microsoft MVP for C#. Check out Devlicio.us!

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