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"Whidbey" Publishers Summit

I talked about the XML support in VS.NET "Whidbey" at a publishers summit hosted here in Redmond yesterday, which prompted some good feedback. Now that I have been caught up in the machinery of publishing it amazes me how much effort it takes to generate a book through authoring, editing and marketing. There are supposedly around 4000+ books on .NET with about 280 of those on VB.NET alone. Dare, Joshua, Arpan and me hosted an XML round table to talk with some authors on their projects. In an attempt to make their titles standout more I talked to one author who was relating his book to Route 66. Personnally I would have chosen "Samurai Jack cuts VB.NET code". Certainly a title like "The guru's guide to VB.NET" is now considered a non-starter.

I notice that the full abstracts for the PDC talks have now been posted here. If you are totally confused by all these code names this is a brief biased description of each one;

  • "WinFS"- The digital aid meets meta data. Store all your "stuff" and find it seemlessly with hundreds of rules.
  • "Indigo" - SOAP 1.2 + WS-*. The future of distributed computing
  • "Avalon" - Cool UI graphics, no Windows message pump and a declarative programming model.
  • "Yukon" - SQL Server next with the beauty of an XML data type to store all those XML documents.
  • "Whidbey" - VS.NET next with some great innovations in the XML programming model.
Published Thursday, September 18, 2003 3:32 AM by mfussell
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Comments

Sunday, September 28, 2003 12:50 PM by Andrew Watt

# RE: "Whidbey" Publishers Summit

I am really looking forward to seeing and learning about WinFS. IF it's as good as it is cracked up to be then it could produce a substantive shift in how people think of and use data. It will be interesting to see what is there now and also to get a hint of what functionality is yet to come.
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