Data Sources and Data Binding in WPF Talk in Redmond

Published 24 September 08 09:35 AM

On Monday night I spoke at my first .NET users group here on the Microsoft Campus. It was the Visual Basic .NET Developers Association meeting that's here in Building 40/41 Steptoe room behind the cafeteria. It's held every last Monday of the month so if you are in the Seattle area then you should check it out, they've got a great lineup of Microsoft speakers from the VB team presenting.

I have to say I was slightly more nervous than the usual user group meeting because the audience was about half Microsoft employees and there were 4 MVPs in the room including the organizer Robert Green. Bill Vaughn, Rocky Lhokta, and Ted Neward were also there. I was also being filmed so there was this big video camera in the back of the room -- made me feel a little bit like a press release ;-). But by the time I got to my second slide I calmed down and fell into my normal presentation rhythm. And having such high caliber audience made for a lot of great discussions -- really engaging with a lot of participation.

I started the talk with basics of data binding to a variety of data sources and then we moved to more to data access discussions and n-tier architecture issues. It was similar to the talk I did at Bay.NET in SF last month but I focused this time completely on WPF and didn't show any Winforms at all. This allowed us to have more time for architecture discussions and I think it worked out well. It was a fun meeting and nothing blew up so that was nice too ;-).

I think the coolest part was when I got a question form a gentleman in the crowd and I asked him what kind of applications he was building and he said "CodePlex". He was a developer on the CodePlex team -- cool! I told him to say HI to Sara. At the end I also had a Silverlight question that I didn't know the answer to but it turned out that Beatriz from the WPF team was in the audience ready to help me out. At the end both she and Rocky told me that my presentation was well done and accurate. It was great to hear from the experts that I did well and didn't **** anything up. :-)

I've attached the presentation and code samples.

Enjoy!

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# car insurance » Data Sources and Data Binding in WPF Talk in Redmond said on September 24, 2008 12:43 PM:

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# Logan said on September 25, 2008 2:37 AM:

Hi Beth,

So you're becoming something of a .NET celebrity by the looks of it ;-)

The main thing is you enjoyed it. What I wouldn't give to be part of it.

Regards,

Logan

# Fred said on October 9, 2008 3:29 PM:

Where is the "OMS"(?) database that your first WPF video refers too?  I pulled down the sample C# code, but can't find any MDF or LDF files to attach to SQL Server 2008 Developer Edition.  I'm jumping in at the middle, so perhaps I missed where the database is located.

# Beth Massi said on October 13, 2008 12:41 PM:

Hi Fred,

Sorry about that (and sorry for the slow response, I've been having trouble posting to my own blog for a week).

You can get the database from this sample: http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/vbvideosdata (try the first download)

HTH,

-B

# VB Feeds said on October 21, 2008 2:57 AM:

Today I woke up at the crack of dawn because I had an 8:30 AM session. Okay maybe not quite the crack

# Beth Massi - Sharing the goodness that is VB said on December 8, 2008 2:24 PM:

Lat week I had the pleasure of speaking at DevTeach in Montreal. Last time I was in Montreal it was in

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About Beth Massi

Beth is a Program Manager on the Visual Studio Community Team at Microsoft and is responsible for producing and managing content for business application developers, driving community features and team participation onto MSDN Developer Centers (http://msdn.com), and helping make Visual Studio one of the best developer tools in the world. She also produces regular content on her blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/bethmassi), Channel 9, and a variety of other developer sites and magazines. As a community champion and a long-time member of the Microsoft developer community she also helps with the San Francisco East Bay .NET user group and is a frequent speaker at various software development events. Before Microsoft, she was a Senior Architect at a health care software product company and a Microsoft Solutions Architect MVP. Over the last decade she has worked on distributed applications and frameworks, web and Windows-based applications using Microsoft development tools in a variety of businesses. She loves teaching, hiking, mountain biking, and driving really fast.

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