This past Thursday evening, Ray Winninger, Jennifer Ritzinger, Arthur Yasinski, and I met Steve Wiebe for dinner at Pomegranate in Redmond, Washington. If you're not familiar with Steve, he's featured in the recent documentary, The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters. My wife and I saw the movie a few weeks back at Big Picture in Redmond and loved it. Even if you're not a fan of classic video games, this is a great movie (don't take my word for it).
Immediately after the movie, I told my wife that I'd love to find Steve and take him to dinner (he lives in the area). He seemed like a great guy in The King of Kong, and although I don't hold any current records, I have held a few in the distant past, and I figured he'd be fun to spend some time with.
I happened to mention the movie to Arthur at lunch one day, and it turns out that he lives just down the street from Steve...and has seen him playing Donkey Kong in his garage many times! :-) With Arthur's help, I was in touch with Steve's wife, Nicole, a few e-mails later, and it wasn't long after that that we had set a dinner date.
Fast forward to dinner. Let me start by saying that Steve Wiebe is exactly as he is portrayed in the movie. He's polite, considerate, very likable, smart, and respectful of everyone he talks about. Steve was a mechanical engineer at Boeing where he worked on landing gear, and he's currently teaching seventh grade math in the area. We spent almost three hours talking and enjoying a great dinner. Among many "behind the scenes" stories, here are a few other tidbits from the evening:
As a side note, before dinner, Ray, Jennifer, Arthur, and I decided to try our hands at Donkey Kong to see who could get the highest score (we have a machine in the office). If anything, it would give us an appreciation of Steve's amazing achievement of 1,049,100. After a couple of rounds, I happened to get the high score of 26,600...and that was on a machine that gives you six lives! Pretty sad.
Thank you to Steve for saying "yes" to dinner. It was a fun evening!
Somebody stop me! I'm posting at the frenetic rate of one entry per month, and this relentless onslaught of information has to seem like you're drinking from a fire hose! Call me prolific, if you'd like. Seriously...I won't mind. :-)
Okay...the big news of the day is that we released Silverlight 1.0 and Expression Encoder 1.0! Perhaps the best place to learn about the details is in Scott Guthrie's post. At the same time, we announced a partnership with Novell that will provide a Linux implementation of Silverlight called "Moonlight" that will run on all Linux distributions. Read Miguel de Icaza's post for the scoop. Cool stuff!
Also, Andrej Benedik (one of our WPF Conversion Tool contest winners) has released a couple of new tools and libraries to help read data from some of the most commonly used file formats (SVG, EMF, WMF, 3DS) and convert them to XAML. I love seeing the libraries, because that means you can easily build your own applications that consume these formats at runtime. Find the new tools on his WPF-Graphics site along with some samples.
Thanks to Thomas Goddard (of Maya to XAML fame) for giving me the heads-up about Electric Rain's Swift 3D v5 Silverlight integration. If you're not familiar with Swift 3D, it's a true 3D modeling and animation system that outputs individual frames to be played back in Flash files. Or put another way, imagine if a 3D modeling tool like 3ds Max or Maya "rendered" to 2D shapes that were shaded and colored to look like real 3D objects. Pretty innovative, if you ask me. Anyway, the recently released version 5 of Swift 3D now accomplishes this task for Silverlight. This means that you can create an animated 3D scene, export to XAML, then play it back in the browser or bring it into Expression Blend for further tweaking. Suh-weeeeeeeet!