Interviews with Jordanian Microsoft Guests

Filed Under (Development, software management) by Emad Alashi on 31-12-2011

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During the last quarter of 2011 we have hosted two amazing Jordanian Microsoft guests, Yousef Al Khalidi (Distinguished Engineer), and Ayman Dahleh (Development Manager for the Global Experience Platform group), who happened to be having their vacation here, they generously accepted our invitation to deliver sessions here in Jordan despite their busy times.

The community recorded these two inspiring interviews with our guests through which I can see how close achievements can be.

A big thank-you to Mr. Yousef and Mr. Ayman for their availability, and thanks to our DPE at the time Mohammad Arrabi for giving us this opportunity to meet such great people, and thanks to our community member Mosab for making these videos.

Reflections on Jordev Web Camp

Filed Under (Development, Personal) by Emad Alashi on 17-05-2011

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webcampsLast Saturday 14th of May 2011 we had the first web camp in Jordan among Jordev’s activities, and it was great!
check my presentation slides at the end of this post.

The event was like the following:

  1. 8:30 AM – 9:00 AM: Registration
  2. 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM: Four 50 minutes sessions with 10 minutes between each for breaks, there was a few attendees at the beginning so we delayed the first session for couple of minutes (yes we have a morning problem here). Sessions were “Entity Framework 4.1”, “ASP.NET MVC One Step Deeper”, “Dynamic Data”, and “jQuery
  3. 1:00 PM – 2:15 PM: lunch break, where people went to the near market and had their lunch there.
  4. 2:15 PM – 4:30 PM: free coding session.

Things went great:

  1. Enough people attended. The attendees were about 25 people spread all over a hall that takes at least 100, this gave us a great freedom in moving around and hocking cables freely on available slots.
  2. The attendees were great. It’s awesome that the attendees were really serious about the event; everyone brought his/her laptop charged and ready, every one was kind enough to pay the right attention, and everyone stayed to the last minute; it’s this passion and dedication that makes a successful event a successful event.
  3. Very good speakers. We were lucky enough to host one of the smartest and most active community members in Jordan: Omar Qadan, Mahmoud Manasrah, and Omar Muwahed did a great job and delivered such a rich value, I was humbled to be among such intelligent speakers and share the stage with them.
  4. Topics were diverse. It’s true all web, but we covered four important parts that summed the basics of a web app: Entity Framework, ASP.NET MVC, Dynamic Data, and jQuery.
  5. There was no lunch arrangement hassle. Interestingly enough, we decided to skip the arrangement for lunch; we still had a lunch break and we provided fast coffee, but we revolted on the pattern of supplying sponsored food and snacks on the lunch break, this gave us the opportunity to concentrate more on delivering technical value, and less managerial things. Of course the near market made our decision a lot easier, in addition to our good luck of having such sufficient number of attendees.
  6. Two and half hours of Free coding. Actually this was pretty good; the free nature of the session allowed the attendees to contribute, and to ask their questions freely.
    We first gave the attendees the opportunity to try things on their own, then we suggested to have walkthroughs; started playing with some of the latest technologies NuGet and Glimpse, then a walkthrough on ASP.NET MVC, then finally a brief general talk about OData.

    Though I see a big space for improvement here; the down side is that there was a dominant stream because the presenter used the main desk and the presentation screen to talk to the majority in the walkthroughs, which was a distraction to the individuals who wanted to try things on their own, anyway I didn’t hear any complaints.
    We had an option to distribute people among groups depending on the technology they want to learn, but it appeared that it was little bit hard to organize, and the attendees in majority agreed to the way we concluded.

  7. The DVD accumulated for the event. We accumulated a DVD that contains Visual Studio 2010 Express, SQL 2008 Express, VS2010 SP1, NerdDinner sample, and MVCMusicStore sample. This helped others to boot up fast with the event, and a nice thing for the attendees to go home with.

Things went wrong:

  1. Marketing the event. We thought that we should limit the number of the attendees to 80 so we don’t end up in crowded auditorium, so we did, and 80 people registered on EventBrite in less than 48 hours of declaring the event on Facebook and Twitter. To our sad happy surprise only 25 people showed up! I know that not all event registrars attend the events they register for online, but the percent is strikingly high! 75% not attending?! what was wrong?
    I think we didn’t do enough reminders, apparently people are lazy about keeping their calendars
  2. SQL Express installation file was 64 bit. 32 bit OS is still the most common OS here, so we missed that up.

Things we did for preparations:

  1. Distributed tasks among us (four people) so everyone had a clear task, this way we made sure we don’t miss anything due to ambiguity in responsibilities
  2. One of us made sure the hall was booked (more tedious than you think!)
  3. Created an event on EventBrite and shared the link over a mailing list, Facebook, and Twitter
  4. Brought enough 3-in-1 packs of Nescafe, one electronic kettle for hot water, and many small bottles of water
  5. Burned out DVD’s with free content (check above)
  6. Brought 3 multi-slot plugs to support the many laptops with electricity
  7. Rehearsed enough for the presentations Smile

That was about it, I hope this reading benefits you and good luck with YOUR web camps.

Jordev-Webcamp-Speakers

My presentation slides embedded:

First Jordev Web Camp

Filed Under (Development) by Emad Alashi on 07-05-2011

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For too long and all Jordev’s activities have been in the form of sessions with fast code demo’s, and for 1637932099-3the first time we are going to break this rule and do our first web camp in which attendees will have the chance to have hands-on experience with some of Jordan’s active experts, it will be on the 15th of May 2011.

There are two things in web camps that make them more interesting: REAL CODING and COLLABORATION; coding is a practice science, best way to learn it is by practice, and this practice will be much more fruitful and enjoyable if done with bunch of enthusiasts who share same passion with you. Speakers will have their share, but the biggest share will go for the hidden experts who have been hiding under excessive working hours, and who avoid boring talkative sessions, this gathering will be a chance for us to dig these gems out and have the most geeky fun and benefit we seek in such communities.

The schedule will be as the following:

Session

Time

Duration

Speaker

Registration

08:30 – 09:00

00:30

-

Entity Framework

09:00 – 9:50

00:50

Omar Qadan

MVC one step deeper

10:00 – 10:50

00:50

Emad Alashi

Data Dynamics

11:00 – 11:50

00:50

Mahmoud Manasrah

jQuery

12:00 – 12:50

00:50

Omar Muwahed

Break

1:00 – 2:00

1:00

-

Hands on Labs

2:00 – 4:30

2:30

Speakers and attendees

For more details you can follow it on EventBrite here, see you there.

Introduction to ASP.NET MVC session at Jordev

Filed Under (Development) by Emad Alashi on 27-11-2010

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It was great to get back to presentations after this while; ASP.NET MVC was the topic for the latest session I delivered through Jordev. The audience was great, I hope they enjoyed it as much as I did preparing for it.

you can find the slides on Slideshare, embedded here as well:

I will upload the photos of the session and possibly a recorded video to youtube in the nearest chance enshallah.

Attend Tech-Ed Middle East 2011 for free!

Filed Under (Development) by Emad Alashi on 30-10-2010

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logoHere is your chance (with little effort) to win a fully-paid trip to Tech-Ed Middle East 2011. Simple tasks are required from your part and you will find yourself with the ultimate geeks in Dubai next year.

For the details check the competitions website on http://compete.jordanruns.net/

Communication Skills Session at MSP – Jordev

Filed Under (Development, Misc, software management) by Emad Alashi on 21-11-2009

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I just finished a session about Communication Skills one-to-one for the MSP program with Microsoft and Jordev. As I promised the audience, here are the slides shared on the very good site SlideShare:

Introduction to NHibernate Session at Jordev Was Good

Filed Under (Development, Misc, NHibernate, Personal) by Emad Alashi on 05-12-2008

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The feedback was very good, and I was glad that everybody liked it. Jordev is really moving ahead, and I am very excited being part of it :)

Below is the slide show (it’s an enhanced version from my previous one):

[slideshare id=821222&doc=introductiontonhibernate-1228487480885456-9&w=425]

Code is the same of the previous one which you can download from here

My First Talk at JorDev .net

Filed Under (Development, Misc, NHibernate, Personal) by Emad Alashi on 21-11-2008

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JordevLogo  nhib-logo04

JorDev .net is a .net user group founded by enthusiastic Jordanian IT professionals. On Wednesday the 26th of November I will be doing my first session of a series about NHibernate.
Details of talk is here:

Overview NHibernate is an Object-relational mapping (ORM) solution for the Microsoft .NET platform. it provides an easy to use framework for mapping an object-oriented domain model to a traditional relational database. Its purpose is to relieve the developer from a significant amount of relational data persistence-related programming tasks.NHibernate is free as open source software that is distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License
Target Audience .NET Developers, Software Designers, Software Engineers, Software Architects
Date Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Location MIC (Microsoft Innovation Center, Royal Scientific Society Building, 3rd Floor)
Time 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm (Amman-Jordan local time)
For More Info Mohamed Saleh @0788716457
Ayman Farouk    @0795727344
Reminders
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