About Me
I'm a technical architect with Headspring in Austin, TX. I focus on DDD, distributed systems, and any other acronym-centric design/architecture/methodology. I created AutoMapper and am a co-author of the ASP.NET MVC in Action books.
Upcoming Talks
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Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- jbogard on Eventual consistency in REST APIs
- Srdjan on Eventual consistency in REST APIs
- DDD Validation | C#Net on Entity validation with visitors and extension methods
- Scott Banwart's Blog › Distributed Weekly 207 on Saga patterns: wrap up
- Scott Banwart's Blog › Distributed Weekly 207 on Eventual consistency in REST APIs
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Meta
Category Archives: Rant
The last vestiges of Hungarian notation
Certain arguments seem to resurface every few years, like whether or not to use a mocking framework, and more recently on Twitter on why .NET still uses Hungarian notation in a few select cases, namely: Interfaces Generic type parameter names … Continue reading
Flash on smartphones
I had a great chuckle in this article linked from Daring Fireball about 10 reasons why the Droid Bionic will score over the iPhone 5, and one of the reasons being the support of Flash (emphasis mine): This is a … Continue reading
Gawker sites breaking the web
Another baffling feature of the new Gawker sites re-design is that it appears that they’ve broken the browser’s Back button. Starting at http://gizmodo.com, I’ll click a link for an article: That brings up the Web 3.0 Frames magic and replaces … Continue reading
Attack of the pseudo-frames
AKA, folks are getting a little too clever in AJAX-land. There was a joke going around when “new twitter” launched that “old twitter” is what Steve Jobs would have designed if his engineers started with “new twitter”. Looking at any … Continue reading
To Thine Own Self Be True
This post is both a rant and a bit of encouragement to any aspiring developers – this will not have code. Gabriel posted a rant earlier which sparked quite a few comments including a number from a fairly frustrated individual. … Continue reading
The religion of dependency injection
A quick way to explain a set of differing opinions is to label it as “a religious argument”. In a post about using MEF on NerdDinner, Scott Hanselman showed an example on using poor man’s DI versus regular DI. Now, … Continue reading
Also posted in Dependency Injection
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Quit Living in the Past – Practices Evolve
In 1846 it wasn’t a required practice for medical professionals to wash their hands or equipment when treating a patient. In 1847, Ignaz Semmelweis experimented and discovered that incidences of maternal death from Puerperal fever at Vienna General Hospital were … Continue reading
Also posted in ASP.NET
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Smart and gets things done *right*
I suppose it’s time for the obligatory weigh-in on the latest bit o’ reckless software advice from Joel Spolsky on the merits of the “Duct Tape Programmer”. I think being a duct tape programmer is a bit like being an … Continue reading
Also posted in MSBuild, Refactoring
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Workaround is a Four-Letter Word
Today in a meeting I heard: “We can provide a workaround for you” and immediately wrote down the title of this post in my notepad. Obviously, workaround is not a four-letter word in reality, but does have nearly the same … Continue reading
Also posted in Tools
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Why are we so cheap with software?
On twitter today, Ayende asked the question: should I offer a personal edition for NH Prof? If so, at what cost? If you’re not familiar with NHibernate Profiler, it’s Ayende’s for-profit, non-OSS NHibernate profiling tool. Honestly, it looks like it … Continue reading
