Thursday, June 17, 2010

GiveCamp — Learning Silverlight and “Coding for Charity”

Last weekend I had the distinct privilege of being part of the 1st annual New England 2010 GiveCamp hosted by Microsoft in Cambridge, Ma. For those who've never heard of GiveCamp, it is a weekend-long event where technology professionals — from designers, developers and database administrators to marketers and web strategists — donate their time to provide solutions for non-profit organizations. For my part, it was somewhat from altruism… but mostly I stepped up for the 48-hour marathon because it gave me an opportunity to join the Silverlight team so that I could hone my skills using this latest and greatest technology from Microsoft.

On the right you see a screen shot of what my team produced: CHaD.Chatter, so named because our non-profit — who we did the Silverlight project for — was Children's Hospital at Dartmouth (CHaD). The "Get Well Messages presented in floating balloons" paradigm was the perfect project — enabling us to delve into numerous aspects of this .NET technology, and to showcase Silverlight in all its glory… even though the truth is that we didn't finish it in the time allotted; that's why there was only one message-carrying balloon animation in the final presentation we made to the larger group.

Since the CHaD team has decided to regroup and finish working on CHaD.Chatter, stay tuned for a subsequent blog article where I will write about — and probably present — a fully working version of this web-based, interactive, database-driven, Silverlight application.

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