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Subject: AOP followed by Opiniated MVC

  1. Sebastien Lambla http://serialseb.blogspot.com tweeter: (the funny twirly sign thing) serialseb email: seb (the funny twirly sign thing) serialseb.com
    • What you came for:
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it:
  2. Toby Henderson http://holytshirt.blogspot.com tweeter: (the funny twirly sign thing) holytshirt email: tobyh (the funny twirly sign thing) perfectinfo.com
    • What you came for: to argue and discuss anything about technology, applying it, creating it.
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: Learnt what AOP is or what people feel it is, realise that I’ve been doing/fightings with it for years, “give it a name”. Looking to the future with MVC I’ve enjoy peoples views regarding how opinionated frameworks should be, sound like I’ll enjoy asp mvc, freedom from asp.net is better than anything.
  3. Neil Robbins http://neildoesdotnet.blogspot.com email: neil (the funny twirly sign thing) computer.org
    • What you came for: Meeting others and learning from them
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: Enjoyed hearing the different views on MVC. Learnt interesting things about REST from Alan in chatting.
  4. Zi Makki http://www.zimakki.com/blog tweeter: (the funny twirly sign thing) zimakki email: zimakki (the funny twirly sign thing) gmail.com
    • What you came for:
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it:
  5. Alan Dean http://blogs.charteris.com/blogs/aland & http://thoughtpad.net/alan-dean & alan.dean (the funny twirly sign thing) gmail.com
    • What you came for:
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it:
  6. Andrew Myhre http://andrewmyhre.wordpress.com
    • What you came for: Meeting new members of the community and finding out what they're interested in.
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: I learnt a new acronym: Aspect Oriented Programming
  7. Jeremy Skinner http://www.jeremyskinner.co.uk http://twitter.com/JeremySkinner
    • What you came for: To meet other developers in the UK community who share similar interests
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: Look into how AOP can simplify implementing cross-cutting concerns & also plan to investigate Rails in more detail.
  8. Andy Duncan http://igiveada.mn andy (the funny twirly sign thing) passiveoutcome.com
    • What you came for:
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it:
  9. Alex Young alex (the funny twirly sign thing) blackkettle.org (the funny twirly sign thing) regularfry
    • What you came for:
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it:
  10. Dylan Beattie dylan (the funny twirly sign thing) dylanbeattie.net dylanbeattie.blogspot.com twitter (the funny twirly sign thing) dylanbeattie
    • What you came for: To drink from the zeitgeist and see what people think is significant in ALT.NET right now.
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: I’m going home to work out how to use progressive enhancement via client script, so I can deliver pages driven by strongly-typed views and fill in the cross-cutting concerns client-side. (I’m going to call it opinionated-aspect-oriented-progressive-view-enhancement and win at buzzword bingo)
  11. Justin Davies http://www.beingnew.net
    • What you came for: To see other opinions about topics
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: I was very interested in Alan’s comments about caching the ‘regular’ parts of an MVC view… using javascript. I’ve always been taught to ensure degredation, so I’m going to explore how to achieve what Alan suggests, while still ensuring a non-javascript client gets full value.
  12. Michael Wagg Michael (the funny twirly sign thing) guerillatactics.co.uk mikewagg.blogspot.com
    • What you came for: Beer and to see if people think making opinionated MVC is a way to make ASP.Net MVC easier for the general .Net population
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: Unfortunately we didn’t quite get there but if we look at the rails world productivity gains can be made in the right context with the right framework
  13. Robin Minto robin (the funny twirly sign thing) minto.co.uk
    • What you came for: Beer, people, talk
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: Different MVC opinions will help me choose my own
  14. Ben Smith
    • What you came for: Beer & infamy
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: AOP is really fun
  15. JP Dupont jean.pierre (the funny twirly sign thing) britinsurance.com
    • What you came for: listening and learning
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: implement some AOP using Windsor.
  16. Jason ‘Argos’ Hughes argos.accu (the funny twirly sign thing) gmail.com
    • What you came for: to spend time with developers that care and are want to learn things!
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it: Reminded me I need to look at Windsor (or IOCs in general)
  17. Stu Campbell stuart.campbell1 (the funny twirly sign thing) gmail.com
    • What you came for:
    • What you learnt and what you’ll do about it:

Random other comments: Really glad I came, but I think you have to be careful about things just going off wherever experienced/”important” speakers go. There were a few times tonight where it turned in to the Seb and Alan show – as they both talked about things they cared and knew lots about, but weren’t what the other people had started talking about. This might have been caused by “speaker-it is” and not being able to help themselves when there was a slight pause in conversation – but perhaps only letting people like them have a severely limited time on the couch might help.

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