eBook on ASP.NET 3.5 Service Pack 1 First Draft - More Wally - Wallace B. McClure
in

MoreWally.com

Giving people what they want, More Wally. This is the technical and personal blog site of
Wallace B. (Wally) McClure.

This Blog

Syndication

Technical Sites

More Wally - Wallace B. McClure

This blog will have all kinds of posts about Wally McClure. In it, there will be tons of .NET and computer programming posts as well as Wally's views on life in general. As you might guess, this site and blog help you get More Wally in your life. What more could anyone want? .NET, ADO.NET, ASP.NET, AJAX, Atlas, Microsoft AJAX Library, ASP.NET AJAX, and now Windows Azure............follow me on twitter at Wally

eBook on ASP.NET 3.5 Service Pack 1 First Draft

After much pain, agony, cussing, and fussing, I have shipped off the first draft of an eBook on ASP.NET 3.5 Service Pack 1 to Wiley/Wrox.  In a moment of weakness foolishness back in September, I told Jim Minatel at Wiley that I would write an eBook on the new features in ASP.NET 3.5 Service Pack 1.  I wasn't able to start until October.  I kinda mistakenly glossed over the fact that I was speaking at VSLive in Last Vegas, spent a week going through Ohio to do 7 talks, got sick for what ended up being 12 days, and had my laptop crash on me causing me to lose my first ten pages.  Finally, this morning I shipped off the first draft. 

Comments

 

Dew Drop - November 19, 2008 | Alvin Ashcraft's Morning Dew said:

Pingback from  Dew Drop - November 19, 2008 | Alvin Ashcraft's Morning Dew

November 19, 2008 8:36 AM

About wallym

Wallace B. (Wally) McClure INETA Speaker's Bureau Microsoft MVP ASPInsider Co-author of "Beginning AJAX with ASP.NET" Co-author of "Professional ADO.NET Programming" Co-author of "Building Highly Scalable Database Applications with .NET" Master's Degree in Electrical Engineering from Georgia Tech Bachelor's Degree in Electrical Engineering from Georgia Tech
2006 - Wallace B. McClure
Powered by Community Server (Non-Commercial Edition), by Telligent Systems