Rick Strahl is trying
to tie up an article on client ScriptCallbacks in ASP.NET 2.0. He's
having a rough time because .NET 2.0 is still, in some respects, a moving
target. I rewrote my ADO.NET
2.0 article for MSDN Magazine 3 times based on releases between my first
draft and publication date. My CoDe Mag article on
Debugger Visualizers also had to be updated just before publication
when the object model changed. I believe one author had to throw out an
entire chapter of an upcoming ADONET 2.0 book since a namespace was removed.
Oops.
.NET 2.0 is very close, but they have definitely been fixing some issues
since Beta2. I know that the way that ADO.NET 2.0 works with SQL Server 2005's
Query Notification has been reworked from the inside out (on the outside it
hasn't changed dramatically though) and I'm trying to get a presentation
ready (powerpoints are due 2 months before the conference) so that's been
fun.
Actually, it *is* fun. We complain and maybe spend more time than normal
dealing with keeping up with the shifts, but it's fun. I know that the changes
in Query Notification have made me look much deeper into the plumbing than I
might have otherwise - which only helps to make me understand it better. It's
definitely a rollercoaster ride - filled with passengers who all share a common
disorder.
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