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There are 4 entries for the tag
adam kinney
I’m a little late to the game posting information about it, but there is a plethora of Silverlight stuff to do this week in the Seattle/Redmond area this week. Sleepless in Seattle…definitely not – Silverlight in Seattle baby! Allow me to interpret Adam’s vector goods… 14 Sep (tonight!): Jesse Liberty is presenting at the .NET DA user group meeting on .NET RIA Services. 15 Sep: Nerd Dinner!!! Just a casual gathering of people who speak in acronyms and like food. Bellevue Crossroads food court (awesome choices for anyone). ...
Just doing some getting caught up from my holiday recently and I was reminded of a “line of business” application that was completed in Silverlight for the United States Army. It is a bit of a supply chain management application…where the supply is soldiers! This is a pretty cool application that was taken from a full client (Windows Forms) application and brought to Silverlight by ProModel. They specialize in supply and demand issues. Take a look at the interview/demo that Adam Kinney did with Dan Hickman of ProModel. Sure, it would have been cool to have a drill sergeant...
i hopped on a plane at 4am this morning to head back to phoenix from seattle. oddly enough i landed in rain. what gives phoenix? actually it is a welcome refresh for me.
i was in seattle for the silverlight fire starter event with my comrade mithun. this was basically a one-day silverlight lovefest. and the lineup of people was awesome:
jesse liberty
adam kinney
laurence moroney
...
i saw over in the township of adam kinney that someone came up with a silverlight version of the sIFR concept.
for those who don't know, sIFR (scalable inman flash replacement) in simplest forms is a method for using css to annotate elements of text that you might want replaced with higher-quality/different/pick-your-word-of-choice typography. it provided a method on sites to essentially say "hey if javascript is enabled and flash is installed, replace this plain text header with some whiz-bang custom font to make the user say ooooooooohhhh yea" or something like that.
filipe fortes, who apparently used to work on the wpf...