eReader Fence Sitting…

3/8/2010 12:47:13 PM

I have been tempted to go the eReader route lately, but have found myself unable to pull the trigger.  Between the Kindle, Nook, and Sony eReader you would think I would be able to settle on a device and join the rest of the happy tech masses in the eBook revolution. I just can’t, however.  Each device has a limitation.

I think the Kindle is the leader of all the devices right now. In my limited research, it appears to have the best online selection of books, and Amazon beats B&N on eBook pricing in a lot of cases.  So why not the Kindle? No WiFi in the device.  I just can’t bring myself to buy a device that does not have WiFi built-in.  I know it has free 3G, but you KNOW at some point there will be a version of Kindle with WiFi, and I don’t want to be suffering from buyer’s remorse later for a feature I think is a no-brainer today.  I’m pretty sure it doesn’t support some of the open ePub formats either.

The Nook is a nice device.  It seems a bit slower than the Kindle, but not a lot.  It feels a lot heavier, but it only an ounce heavier so not sure what my deal is there.  But, B&N has a smaller selection of eBooks right now (I have found several titles on Amazon but not on B&N) and they do charge more often enough that I am left wondering WTF.  I thought the color screen was a nice touch, but its input is just slow enough that I know it would drive me nuts.

Lastly, there is  the Sony eReader.  Whatever…. it is a very nice device.  In some ways, I like it better than the other devices, but it has a limited book catalog as well and it just feels like an “outlier” device.  That could be a very bad perception on my part, but this whole thing is about perception so it is what it is.  Impulse buys like this are often made or broken on perceptions. Throw in the fact that it is the least connected of the three devices and that is uses those God awful Sony memory sticks (get on board with microSD, morons!) and its a non-starter.

I’m left feeling that I will have to just sit on the sidelines for another 12 months or so and see what the next generation of devices yields.  It would be nice to have a true “all in one” reader and web browsing device. That would be awesome.  I still worry about the comfort of the form factor.  Books just seem to be a fit for reading anywhere.  Hard for me to picture holding a thin eReader in my dimly lit bedroom while propped up by a pillow reading one of these devices.  But I do like not lugging multiple books around on trips and being able to change the font type and size.

Oh well… T-minus 12 months and counting…

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Slick Thoughts

Next Generation Testing with Visual Studio 2010 Road Show

3/3/2010 9:28:50 AM

Get a sneak peek at some of the new capabilities in Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2010, a landmark release of the premier development and testing toolset for Windows®, Web and Cloud development. 
Microsoft has made significant investments to improve the Testing/QA tools in Visual Studio 2010.  The Next Generation Testing Event is your exclusive opportunity to experience the incredible power and capabilities these new tools bring to the QA and testing process.  At this event, you’ll get a comprehensive overview, as well as a deep dive, into the range of new tools and how they can enable you to improve the way you develop and test software on the Microsoft platform. 
This will be an invaluable opportunity to learn how to take software development to the next level with Visual Studio 2010’s new testing features

Event Agenda

Topic

Registration, Welcome, Food Served

30 min.

The QA Challenge

30 min.

Taking Testing to a New Level

3 hours

Making it Real

30 min.

Prize Drawing

15 min.


clip_image001Date

clip_image001[1]Location

Event ID

3/3

Nashville

1032441936

3/3

Houston

1032441938

3/4

Cincinnati

1032441934

3/12

Bloomington

1032442187

3/12

Southfield

1032441932

3/15

Milwaukee

1032441929

3/15

St. Louis

1032441930

3/15

Columbus

1032442186

3/16

Kansas City

1032441931

3/16

Cleveland

1032441933

3/18

Indianapolis

1032441928

4/13

Chicago

1032442250

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Headlines

Spaghetti Code Podcast: The State of IronPython and IronRuby with Jimmy Schementi

3/1/2010 8:25:00 AM

Spaghetti Code is joined by Microsoft’s own Jimmy Schementi.  Jimmy is the Program Manager for the various Iron languages being worked on by Microsoft.  In this episode, Jimmy walks us through the history of the Dynamic Language Runtime and the Iron languages, along with numerous insights into both languages.  We also talk about where the languages are going as we approach some major milestones in each languages development. 

  • Direct Download - click here
  • Subscribe - click here
  • iTunes - click here
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    SpaghettiCode

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    Jeff Brand Jeff Brand

    This is the personal web site of Jeff Brand, self-proclaimed .NET Sex Symbol and All-Around Good guy. Content from my presentations, blog, and links to other useful .NET information can all be found here.

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