Reflections and tidbits from Toronto

Here are my notes from my trip to Smalltalk Solutions in Toronto:

  • If you ask for a cappuccino at Tim Horton’s you will get regular coffee with milk, really.
  • Don’t try to use your credit card at Tim’s.
  • Tim Horton’s is the parallel universe counterpart to Dunkin Donuts.
  • Coffee shops will serve your coffee in paper cups but without a lid. Why???
  • Some coffee shops (Timothy’s) require that you pick out your paper cup and then hand it over to the coffee people.
  • The Federal goverment charges sales tax on food and so does the state. I was told that it all adds up to about 15% and that of course does not include tip and of course also does not include the “foreign fee” your bank will charge you.
  • Many, many restaurants in the downtown area have TVs in them.
  • Brian Foote is a funny dude —most enjoyed presentation.
  • Eliot has a funny laugh.
  • Martin McClure bakes his own bread.
  • Michael-Lucas Smith woke up at 4 am and then went to an Aikido session.
  • I managed to get in decent amount of guitar time.
  • Michael also slept through dessert last nite, really.
  • Canadian Bob Nemec is the new Executive Director of STIC. I was told that he will decree that from now on all Smalltalk code must be written in both French and English.
  • I am so “web-ed” out but for those that are not there was a lot of useful to potentially useful web technology on display.
  • The crypto stuff, boy that was a snore
  • Apparently, there are only 27,000 sunits for Pollock not 50,000 +
  • Haddocks have loins.
  • A NYC Smalltalker won the coding contest. So Andres, may be the coding contest experience would make a good topic for a presentation?
  • Smalltalk Solutions 2007 will be in Toronto again.
  • Country music and Hockey apparently mix well.
  • Not convinced that we got a lot of exposure to non-Smalltalkers but I guess something is better than nothing. Perhaps better next year. More time to plan, more leverage with the organizers. Maybe.
  • My most satisfying meal came out of a vending machine the very last nite. A “Vickies” Sea salt malt vinegar potato chip bag and some French orange-ade like beverage. Pretty good actually. I wonder if there are any Smalltalker gastrophiles (is that a word ?) i.e. Smalltalkers that like good food and I just mean good and not pretentiously expensive. Just one nice dinner would have sufficed.
  • The Good, the bad and the ugly was a Clint Eastwood film before it was a Jeff Sutherland article. I would be more concerned to piss off Clint than Jeff.
  • I guess overall the content seemed light but then again we had less slots to use because of the combined conference. Perhaps , next year we can elevate the technical content and spread it around, perhaps get more slots from the conference.
  • We should avoid negative PR presentations.
  • Some non-Smalltalker dude asked one of the vendors at the exhibit hall “what are objects”, boy what a flash back.
  • I had a nice chat with the dark angel. Wants to show us stuff. Hmmm.
  • I don’t believe anything got accomplished from the packaging BOF but I guess folks got to express their needs which is a good thing.
  • I don’t fit well in a twin size bed.
  • CanJet worked out pretty well. Will use them again.
  • Overall, great to talk with people again face to face and it was great to see some faces I had not seen in a while.
  • Happy to be home back in this fantastic city. Looking forward to Bruce’s presentation next week which I purposely missed at StS.

That all folks ….

The OpenSkills SkillsBase system

NYC Smalltalk will have its next presentation on May 4th, 2006. Our dear friend and once upon regular British friend now living in Australia will bring us up to date on his long standing SkillBase system.

The OpenSkills SkillsBase system runs using an application server that
has the advanced features one would expect but with several unique
properties. Demonstrations will be interleaved throughout the talk.
The following is a small selection of the topics Bruce will include.
o No impedence missmatch when persisting objects
o Huge numbers of instances of the application are possible
o No HTTP session affinity required (i.e. apps can be RESTful)
o A cache of unmodified objects shared by all instances
o One language throughout the system
o Application code is executed in the databases processes …..
o The DBMS *is* the application server
o Premier IDE from which code is injected directly into the app server
… though we do use a staging area for production changes

Bruce Badger is an enthusiastic technologist and the Founder and
President of OpenSkills.org, a global non-profit association of
professional individuals. His strong technical leadership skills have
contributed to his success of a wide range of IT projects, over a
period of more than 25 years. He has built and deployed many systems
and libraries over the past 10 years, preferring to develop software
using Smalltalk, a pure Object Oriented language. Bruce is currently
focusing on the evolution of the services market as Free and Open
Source software is increasingly adopted. He has written a number of
Open Source libraries, and is currently engaged with building the
support systems for the OpenSkills association.

For more info pls checkout our wiki.