First thing Thursday I was assisting in the Instructor-led Lab “Microsoft Visual Studio 2010: Office Programmability”. That went well. I ended up having to explain extension methods to a few of the attendees who hadn’t come across them yet. A good reminder that not everyone’s been using all the features of .NET 3.5.

After that I attended the following sessions:

  • DEV354 - Shake, Rattle and Roll with Windows Phone 7 (Nick Randolph)
  • DEV426 - The Art and Engineering of Supple Enterprise Applications (Nicholas Blumhardt)
  • DAT216 - BI for the Microsoft Masses - Top 10 Challenges (Sanjay Soni)

Nick’s talk was good. Windows Phone 7 looks very nice. It was interesting to hear some of the restrictions and limits that need to be take into account to develop for Phone 7.

Nicholas just happens to be the author of AutoFac and also was a member of the MEF team at Microsoft, so he spoke with some experience about inversion of control. I felt it was a little disjointed, and seemed to jump from IoC101 to more advanced concepts a bit too quickly. Even so, I did like Nicholas’s relaxed presentation style. The room was packed too, showing there is demand for 400-level dev talks.

The BI talk wasn’t what I was expecting. It was actually about how Microsoft deployed a BI portal internally.

After the sessions it was time for the two labs that I was instructing/introducing:

  • Introduction to Managed Extensibility Framework
  • Introduction to Test Case Management in Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 with Microsoft Test and Lab Manager (MSDN Lab)

They both went well and I really enjoyed running them. I should say special thanks to Mitch Denny and Anthony Borton who gave me some great resources and assistance preparing for the Test Manager talk.

Whilst the general hands-on labs are good, I liked the Instructor-led Labs the most as all the people in the room were there doing the same thing.

A quick visit back to the hotel room allowed Narelle and I to Skype the kids and grandparents. That was fantastic.

Then back to the convention centre for the “House Party”. I was a bit apprehensive as previous conferences when they’ve tried to do their own social night haven’t been that impressive (previous years at the Gold Coast, Movie World or Dreamworld have been the popular choice). But credit to the organisers, I think they managed to pull off a good evening. There were lots of spaces with different activities – food, full-size fussball, lazer skirmish in the underground carpark, comedians and entertainment in the main arena.