Since the alt.net conference was held in Austin and the theme down there is “Keep Austin Weird”, I think it’s only fitting that we rename alt.net to weird.net. Let’s face it, even though the attendees were 95% caucasian, clean shaven, short-haired, 30 something males, the overall theme of the event screamed “we want to be different.”
As soon as I got back, I had to deal with a crashed server and corrupted active-directory, so I really haven’t had much time even reflect on the weekend. Here’s a few thoughts, I jotted at the airport:
-Scott is often intentionally caustic, his way of forcing people to question everything
-nothing about alt.net is divisive (the event ended with everything but a group hug)
-lots of talk about passion and reinvigorating/finding the passion again
-the “superstars” are uncomfortable with the title and more normal that you’d ever expect
-lots of “Wow, I’ve read your blog forever, I can’t believe I’m meeting you”
-when asked how many have blogs, every hand in the room went up
-Microsoft event planners should be required to study ScottGu presentations, he packed more info in a hour and had the audience captivated
-Microsoft MVC framework is heavily influenced by Django, Rails and Merb (yes, ScottGu explicitly mentioned Merb)
-If you don’t own and haven’t read Domain Driven Design by Evan’s at least twice, do it now
-I still don’t know what alt.net actually means
-conferences was about 15% A-list .net bloggers and Microsoft employees and about 85% normal ordinary guys (and 1 woman), plus Martin Fowler and Scott who are pretty much in a league of their own
-lots of constructive disagreement, very conversational format
-I wish Sam Gentile had attended, he’s a big part of the reason I finally adopted TDD and learned Ruby, I understand his reasons but his experience could have really benefitted the other 85% of the attendees
Ok, that’s all I have time for. I’m really going to try and move the blog entries more to actually talking about implementation than these ramblings.