logo       

August PADNUG Meeting: msg#00052

Subject: August PADNUG Meeting
It's hard to believe that the summer is coming to a close. It seems
like it just began.

That said, it's time to let you know what we have planned for the
PADNUG (http://www.padnug.org) meeting. This should be a good one as
we've got Ted Neward coming down to speak to us about persistance
options in .NET.

WHAT:  August PADNUG meeting.

WHEN:  WEDNESDAY 08/31/2005
       6:00 p.m. Pizza, Sponsored by 3Leaf (http://www.3leaf.com)
       6:30 p.m. Presentation

WHERE: PCC Auditorium at Capital Center
       (http://www.capital.ous.edu/directions.html)
       18640 NW Walker Road
       Beaverton, Oregon
       The auditorium is in room 1508 through entrance B. There is a
       $2 parking fee. The kiosk for paying for parking is located
       Between entrances B and C.

WHO:   Ted Neward (http://www.neward.net/ted/index.html)
       Ted is an independent software development architect and
       mentor recently relocated to the Seattle, Washington area. He
       is the author of a number of books, including Server-Based
       Java Programming (Manning) and Effective Enterprise Java
       (Addison-Wesley), and co-author of SSCLI Essentials (OReilly)
       with David Stutz and Geoff Shilling, as well as C# In a
       Nutshell (OReilly) with Peter Drayton and Ben Albahari. Ted
       has been recognized for his efforts on both sides of the
       technical fence, being an INETA Speaker, a BEA Technical
       Director, and a Microsoft MVP with the C# team. He serves on
       JSR 175, the Java Community Process specification for custom
       metadata in J2SE 1.5, and is also an instructor with
       DevelopMentor, where he teaches and authors in both the Java
       and .NET curriculum. He also contributes to
       TheServerSide.NET, a community portal dedicated to
       enterprise .NET architecture and issues.


TOPIC: Persistence Options in .NET
       From DataSets to NHibernate to the as-yet-unreleased
       ObjectSpaces, .NET is rife with solutions and suggestions for
       how we should persist the data we work with in our systems.
       Come hear the tools, technologies and tradeoffs of each,
       including a few bleeding-edge ideas that may just change the
       face of object persistence for a long time to come. 

Looking forward to seeing you all there!




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
<font face=arial size=-1><a 
href="http://us.ard.yahoo.com/SIG=12hj608lc/M=362335.6886445.7839731.1510227/D=groups/S=1705007709:TM/Y=YAHOO/EXP=1124869017/A=2894361/R=0/SIG=13jmebhbo/*http://www.networkforgood.org/topics/education/digitaldivide/?source=YAHOO&cmpgn=GRP&RTP=http://groups.yahoo.com/";>In
 low income neighborhoods, 84% do not own computers. At Network for Good, help 
bridge the Digital Divide!</a>.</font>
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

 


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>