Sergio and the sigil

ANN: The Second Chicago Code Camp

Posted by Sergio on 2010-03-22

After a successful first Chicago Code Camp last year, we're back to announce the second edition of this unique technical event.

The Chicago Code Camp 2 will happen on May 1st. In this event we are addressing one obvious and recurring feedback: Make it closer to the city.

We're thrilled to announce that our Code Camp will take place at the IIT Campus, just South of downtown Chicago, easily accessible by car and public transportation.

What is the Chicago Code Camp?

Just like last year, we want to host an event where any platform or programming language can have its space, as long as there's community interest in talking and hearing about it.

The code camp is a great opportunity to learn about and network with developers of different walks of life and technologies. Last year we had diverse topics such as .NET, Python, iPhone, Ruby, XUL, JavaScript, Scala, etc. We hope to have even more this time around.

To ensure the numerous technical communities are fairly represented, we are inviting all local technical community leaders to get involved and provide speakers and attendees.

The event is free to attend but everyone needs to register. Registration will open soon Registration is open and it's limited due to the venue capacity.

Call for Speakers

The Chicago Code Camp website is up and ready to receive talk proposals.

The Code Camp Manifesto calls for sessions that privilege code over theory or slides, but it doesn't mean a good presentation will be immediately turned down because of that.

Stay tuned

We will have more exciting news and announcements to share about this event. We will do so as soon are they are confirmed.

Keep an eye on the website (or this blog) to learn about registrations, volunteering, and getting involved.

[ANN] Chicago ALT.NET shows Rake and Albacore

Posted by Sergio on 2010-03-09

I haven't mentioned our meetings here in a while but our group has been going strong and enthusiastic all this time.

Tomorrow, March 10th our topic will be build scripts for .Net projects using Rake and Albacore. I've been using Rake and a little bit of Albacore in my own projects and I'm ready to say that it will take a very serious event to make me go back to NAnt or MSBuild.

Introduction to Rake with Albacore.NET

6:00 pm
Pizza and networking time

6:30 pm

How would you to write your build scripts using a scripting language instead of XML? In this month's meeting we will see how the ease of programming in Ruby can be used to create a much more pleasant and extensible build script.

Rake isn't just for Rubyists or Alphageeks anymore. Albacore helps bring the power and expresiveness of the Ruby language to the world of .NET build automation. Using Rake it's never been easier to handle build automation, test execution, continuous integration and just about any task you need to automate for your build.

Michael D. Hall has been developing software on the Microsoft platform for over a decade. He's been an Alt.NETter for years and is really enjoying the exposure to different ideas and concepts beyond the safe confines of the .NET world. Currently he's a consultant working with Obtiva and has started a Cloud Developer's Group that meets monthly in McHenry county.

Register for Introduction to Rake with Albacore.NET in Chicago, IL  on Eventbrite

CouchDB Presentation

Posted by Sergio on 2009-10-01

In this month's Chicago ALT.NET meeting we will be taking a look at Apache CouchDB. I quote from the official site:

Apache CouchDB is a document-oriented database that can be queried and indexed in a MapReduce fashion using JavaScript. CouchDB also offers incremental replication with bi-directional conflict detection and resolution.

CouchDB provides a RESTful JSON API than can be accessed from any environment that allows HTTP requests.

Get Comfy With CouchDB

6:00 pm
Pizza and networking time

6:30 pm

CouchDB is one of the more mature schema-less map/reduce object dbs out there. In this talk we'll cover the basics of what CouchDB is, and why it's cool, and then we'll run through a sample application. The application will show off LINQ to Couch, basic persistance, views and full-text search with CouchDB-Lucene.

Alex Pedenko has been in software development for about 13 years, starting off on Borland Delphi, then spending about 4 years in Java and finally making the switch to .net around '03

Currently, he is the director of software architecture and chief architect at a healthcare services company. He has used that role as an opportunity to inject some modern ideas into an otherwise lagging industry, moving the company from a classic "giant web-app strapped to an even more giant db", to a distributed, service-oriented environment utilizing RESTful services, and rich-client applications.

Alex is also involved in a number of Open Source projects like Bistro and NDjango, and the .net side of CouchDB via Divan and LoveSeat

Mozilla Add-Ons in Chicago

Posted by Sergio on 2009-09-17

Later this month I'll be attending the Mozilla Add-Ons Meetup in Chicago.

I'm continually impressed with the extensibility of Mozilla applications and the amazing things people are doing with it. I'm interested in both the extensibility model and in writing a few custom extensions myself, even if it's just for my own use. Given that it's mostly XML and JavaScript, it should be right up my alley.

After seeing a presentation about building Firefox extensions earlier this year I decided I had to look into that more seriously.

So if you're in the area and wants to see what this is all about, this meetup might be a good way to get some info to get going.

Interview for the Thirsty Developer Podcast

Posted by Sergio on 2009-07-29

It was my turn to be interviewed by Dave and Larry for The Thirsty Developer podcast.

We talked a lot about all things JavaScript, its status, how people learn it (or avoid it), etc. I hope it's an entertaining interview

You can download the interview from the podcast page