October 11, 2006

Who's Going to MAX?

MAX is always fun, but this year is going to set a new standard. If we can have a blast in Salt Lake City (three years ago, was it?), imagine how much fun we're going to have in Vegas.

Adobe has a lot of cool projects in the works that we're going to showcase at MAX. Of course, I'm a little biased toward the Apollo sessions (one of which I'll be giving). There will also be plenty of Apollo demonstrations, samples, and announcements.

Let me know if you're going to be there. If you were ever going to attend a MAX conference, this is the one to come to. You have until October 16th to register. I've heard that you can even get the conference hotel rate after the conference if you want to tack on a little personal time.

Posted by cantrell at 11:50 AM. Link | Comments (4) | References

August 11, 2006

Upcoming Apollo Sessions

I'm going to be talking about and showing Apollo at Flashforward in Austin in September, and MAX at the Venetian in Las Vegas in October. If you're interested in learning more about Apollo, these are the places to be. Let me know if you're going to be there and want to hang out. There will be plenty of time for talking Apollo, eating BBQ, playing blackjack, and probably getting in a game or two Halo.

Posted by cantrell at 10:34 AM. Link | Comments (6) | References

February 28, 2006

The Many Faces of Flash

I'm at Flashforward in Seattle this week, and whenever I go to Flash conferences, I'm always amazed to see all the different ways people are using Flash. I'm mostly consumed with Flex these days, so I tend to forget about all the other places Flash is appearing. In the last day, I've seen Flash discussed in the following contexts:

And, of course, in the browser for just about everything you can think of. Am I missing anything?

Posted by cantrell at 08:07 AM. Link | Comments (5) | References

February 25, 2006

Who's Going to be at Flashforward?

I head out to Flashforward 2006 in Seattle at the ungodly hour of 6AM tomorrow. The conference doesn't start until Monday, but tomorrow morning's flight was the last one available. I even called my travel agent today and begged her to pull some strings, call in some favors, anything she could do, but no luck. Why do they even have flights that early?

Anyway, I'm very happy to be heading up to Seattle for this year's west coast Flashforward rather than across the city where it's normally held in San Francisco. I've never been to Seattle, so I'm looking forward to checking out a new city. Any suggestions as to what I need to see while I'm there?

I've been working hard with a couple other guys on a little surprise for the keynote which is why I haven't been blogging much lately. If you're going to be at Flashforward, make sure you're there Tuesday morning. If you're not, I'll blog about it here either in real-time if I can get a connection, or after it's over.

Let me know if you'll be in Seattle next week. After the keynote, I should have plenty of time to hang out.

Posted by cantrell at 07:22 PM. Link | Comments (3) | References

November 17, 2005

MAX Hong Kong: Software, Food, and Shopping

This is my kind of town. Great food, great technology, and a great conference. I gave a presentation this morning entitled "Next Generation ActionScript", and it went very well. I'll post the presentation and all the example files here once I get back to San Francisco.

As Scott mentioned, we ate a 13-course Chinese meal last night! I had no idea such a thing was even possible. I didn't realize it was going to be 13 courses, so for the first few, I finished everything they served me. Eventually, I checked the menu and realized there were about 9 more courses to go. Although I didn't end up cleaning every plate they put in front of me, I ate far more than I needed to, and didn't eat again until lunch today.

The sessions today have been great. After my session this morning, I listened to Steven Webster talk about Cairngorm, then to Mark Blair talk about Flex Data Services after lunch. This is the hard part of the day when my body wants me to go to sleep because it's about 11:00 in San Francisco, so I'll grab some caffeine and hit a few more sessions before taking a walk around the city.

I leave tomorrow morning: a non-stop, 12-hour flight back to San Francisco. Fortunately, I have plenty of video and PSP games to keep me company, along with some head-to-head SOCOM with Scott.

Posted by cantrell at 10:56 PM. Link | Comments (0) | References

November 16, 2005

From Korea to Hong Kong

We wrapped up MAX Korea today. This was my first time at any MAX other than US. I have to say, I was very impressed. The sessions were good, the speakers were good, the attendees were passionate, and the hotel and conference center were very nice facilities.

I wish I had been able to spend more time on Seoul. We went out for a great Korean meal last night at a place where there was live traditional music. That's about all I saw of Korea, however, other than the conference center, airport, and what I could see from the taxi in between. Next time, I'll try to come in a day early. Seoul seems like an amazing city, though a little cold for my taste this time of year (I've gotten soft since moving from Washington DC to San Francisco).

I left Seoul this morning very early and arrived in Hong Kong three hours later (three hours flies by with a PSP with SSX and GTA). Scott Fegette and I spent a good portion of the day walking around the city, drooling over various electronics. We both bought cases for our iPod videos (there are no cases currently available in the US), and I'm pretty sure I'll end up with a new digital camera before I leave. And the best part is the Casio G-Shock store right across the street from our hotel (I'm a huge G-Shock fan).

We had a speaker briefing this evening during which I had a chance to reconnect with several people, and meet several others. Tomorrow morning, the conference begins with the general session led by Mark Anders. I will be doing an expanded version of the presentation I did in Korea called "Next Generation ActionScript". I'll post it here once I get back to San Francisco.

So far, the trip has been great, but I'm still very jet lagged. My problem is actually more insomnia rather than fatigue. I'm usually able to stay up pretty easily, but every time I try to sleep, no matter how tired I am, I find myself wide awake again in just a couple of hours. I've probably slept no more than about 10 hours total since leaving, and it's starting to take its toll on me. Hopefully I'll be able to get over the hump tonight, and finally get a good night's sleep. There are a lot of interesting sessions here, and I don't want to miss any of them.

Posted by cantrell at 05:49 AM. Link | Comments (3) | References

November 12, 2005

I'm off to Asia

I leave tomorrow (Sunday) for MAX in South Korea and Hong Kong. I'll be giving some talks on ActionScript 3. If you're going to be there, send me an email, and let's hook up. I'll be gone for a week, and probably jet lagged out of my mind for a day or two after I get home, so I'll be slow answering email.

My presentation contains a lot of good ActionScript 2 (things new to Flash Player 8) and Action Script 3 code examples. I'll post everything online once I get back.

Posted by cantrell at 04:17 PM. Link | Comments (1) | References

October 27, 2005

If You Missed MAX, Catch the Movie

Even if you were there, you can relive some of the best moments through the MAX 2005 videos. It's all very good stuff, but you definitely need to check out the Ze Frank segment at the beginning of day one.

Posted by cantrell at 11:13 AM. Link | Comments (2) | References

October 14, 2005

Macromedia Pins at MAX

Want some very cool Macromedia pins? Just find me at MAX, and ask. These were handed out at a company party at the Fillmore in San Francisco a couple weeks ago. One per customer, so pick your favorite product.

Posted by cantrell at 03:54 PM. Link | Comments (3) | References

October 10, 2005

Video of Flex Announcement at Web 2.0

Although you've probably already seen the Flex 2.0 product family announcement, you can now see a video clip of Kevin Lynch actually delivering the official announcement at Web 2.0. Mike Chambers got Kevin's entire presentation on tape. It's only about 15 minutes long, but Kevin packs in a ton of good information, including building a very nice little application using Flex Builder 2 (Zorn) in only about 5 minutes. The clip is available as Flash video both on Mike's blog and on Google Video. If you get seasick, brace yourself for about the first 30 seconds, but after that, it stabilizes.

Posted by cantrell at 11:33 AM. Link | Comments (3) | References

October 05, 2005

At Web 2.0 the Rest of the Week

I'm blogging from the conference from my sidekick, so this post will be short. I'll be at Web 2.0 for the rest of the week, so if you're not getting a response to an email, that's why. I'll be back in the office Monday. If you're at Web 2.0, keep an eye out for me.

Posted by cantrell at 01:15 PM. Link | Comments (0) | References

April 28, 2005

Home From TODCON

I arrived back in San Francisco this afternoon from TODCON in Las Vegas. It was really an excellent conference. I want to personally thank Ray West of Community MX for organizing the event (and for the blackjack tips).

This was my second TODCON, and what I really like about this conference is the feeling of community among the group. It's a relatively small conference, but pretty much everyone knows each other, or will get to know each other by the end. In most cases, attendees are friends as well as colleagues. That doesn't mean TODCON is a social event, though. Although there are obviously plenty of opportunities for socializing, during the day, sessions are focused and informative, and small enough to be very interactive.

I don't want to start listing names of people I met and new friends I made for fear of leaving someone out, but you guys know who you are. I enjoyed the sessions and the time with the Macromedia community, and I hope to see you all again next year, if not sooner.

Posted by cantrell at 10:08 PM. Link | Comments (8) | References

June 28, 2004

CFUN Overview

Another CFUN is behind us, and I can honestly say, this year was even better than last. CFUN is one of my favorite conferences because it has an abundance of the two things all good conferences need:

  1. Serious, valuable, and enriching sessions presented by top people in the industry.
  2. A community that is easy to get along with, and blast to hang out with!

I don't want to start dropping names for fear I will leave many out, but I hung out and exchanged ideas with a huge number of great developers (and just plain great people) over the weekend. I love to see so many (well over 500!) developers get together from so many different places getting along so well both personally and professionally. Thank you Michael Smith (and others from TeraTech) for making it all possible.

I did a session entitled Flash for CFers which went well, and was a lot of fun. The only problem was that I wasn't able to get a wireless connection to show some very cool demo apps. And I ran out of time. It's hard to even scratch the surface of a topic like Flash and ColdFusion in only 50 minutes, but I think I was able to get through enough of it to give ColdFusion developers a pretty thorough introduction to Rich Internet Applications. I'm going to post the presentation and the source code for the sample application I demoed at some point this week after I get caught up from being out of town. I'll also post links to the RIA examples I was going to show but couldn't because of the network issues.

The audience was great during my presentation. While I was trying to get a network connection, someone shouted "Are you sure the problem isn't your OS?" I was doing the presentation on a Powerbook, and even as a big Mac fan, I thought the comment was funny and timely. Then Steven Erat suggested I demo the Flash Store sample app, if I had that installed and running locally, which fortunately I did (yes, Flex works great on Macs, including debugging). And, naturally, there was Critter in the back who helped to set the tone of the presentation right from the very beginning (if you were in the room, you know what I'm referring to), and then we all rocked out to "Fight the Power" and a hilarious Steve Ballmer remix (in the context of Flash and ColdFusion, of course). I have given a lot of presentations over the last couple of years at a lot of different conferences, and I always like it when I feel like everyone had fun as well as learned something valuable.

Ben Forta's day-two keynote was incredible. He demoed some amazing features of Blackstone, and although the features themselves weren't new to me, I thoroughly enjoyed watching the reaction of the audience. I lost count of the number of times the audience erupted in applause during his talk, and all around me, I heard constant murmurs of amazement and excitement. I think Blackstone is going to be an extraordinarily popular release. Anyone who has seen Ben's presentation knows that the ColdFusion engineering team has really outdone themselves this time.

There was some interesting software floating around the conference, as well. There was a beta version of He3 in everyone's bag. He3 is a dedicated ColdFusion editor by RichPalette built on the Eclipse platform. I haven't tried it yet (I didn't have my ThinkPad with me, and I want to try it on Windows first before OS X), but I heard some very good comments which have me intrigued. I will definitely install it early this week and set aside some time to evaluate it.

Doug Hughes of Alagad was handing out copies of the new Alagad Image Component. I've played with it in the past, and it's very impressive. It is capable of performing over 60 image manipulation operations, and has an extremely intuitive and powerful API. As an added bonus, it is implemented entirely in CFScript, so you don't even need to install any jar or class files on your server to use it. Very cool stuff. If you need to manipulate images on the server, you need this component.

It was good seeing everyone again this year. Let's continue to keep in touch, and I look forward to doing it all again in 2005!

Posted by cantrell at 11:09 AM. Link | Comments (4) | References

June 25, 2004

Heading to CFUN

I'll be heading up to Maryland for CFUN 2004 in a few hours to join many friends and colleagues for a weekend of ColdFusion, a little Flash, and maybe a tiny bit of socializing. CFUN is definitely one of the best ColdFusion conferences around, and I feel fortunate I am only about an hour south of the venue (though I would happily travel anywhere to participate).

I'm going to be doing a session on Sunday on Flash for ColdFusion developers which is basically going to be an introduction to Flash and RIAs, geared toward ColdFusion folks. The presentation will probably eventually make it to my weblog, so if you're interested in learning some Flash fundamentals, keep an eye out.

If you're going to CFUN, please come by and introduce yourself. I'll even have some DRKs to give out to the first few folks who ask me for one. Hope to see you there!

Posted by cantrell at 11:55 AM. Link | Comments (1) | References

March 09, 2004

Regional Macromedia Event in Ohio

For all my Ohioan readers, you might want to check out the upcoming Macromedia regional event. The Southeast Ohio Macromedia User Group (SEOMUG) is hosting a one-day technical conference on March 25th from 8:00AM to 4:00PM featuring 3 Macromedia speakers:

More information and registration is at http://www.seomug.org/.

If you don't live in Ohio, what better reason pack up and take a trip to a state I'm sure you've always wanted to visit, but just needed a good enough excuse!

Posted by cantrell at 11:24 AM. Link | Comments (0) | References

March 07, 2004

Flashforward 2004 - A Retrospective

I'm not sure when I'll get a chance to post this since I'm writing it on the plane on the way back from Flashforward 2004 in San Francisco, but I'll try to get it live as soon after I land as possible. As always, I thoroughly enjoyed the conference, and in particular, hanging out with the Flash community. Here are some arbitrary thoughts and observations from last week:

Posted by cantrell at 08:12 PM. Link | Comments (3) | References

March 04, 2004

Flashforward Update - Town Meeting with the Flash Team

So far, Flashforward 2004 has been a blast. I've been spending a lot of time with Danny Dura (newest member of the Central team), and we have really been delving into the potential of some of Macromedia newest inventions like Flex, Central, Breeze Live and others which I can mention after today's keynote, but not before. I'm still completely amazed by the amount of innovation that goes on at Macromedia.

I attended a great session last evening called "Town Meeting with the Macromedia Flash Team". Lucian Beebe, Gary Grossman, Nigel Pegg, Paul Betlem, Gilles Drieu, and Rebecca Sun simply sat up on stage as microphones were passed around the audience, and answered as many questions as they could in an hour. The team was very straightforward and the session went extremely well, with lots of great questions and feedback. The one thing the Flash team kept emphasizing was that they needed to hear from the community what you feel their top priorities should be for future versions of Flash or dot releases of the current version. For those of you who didn't attend and could not contribute in person, any comments posted here will be sent right to the Flash team.

Posted by cantrell at 12:21 PM. Link | Comments (2) | References

September 05, 2003

Rob Burgess to do the Seybold 2003 Keynote

I just found out that Rob Burgess (Macromedia's CEO) will be doing the Seybold 2003 keynote at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. If you are in the Bay Area and you are interested in hearing Rob talk about "Making the Digital Experience Better", you can download a free pass from Macromedia's website. If only I could download a free plane ticket, I would be there.

Posted by cantrell at 12:53 PM. Link | Comments (2) | References

July 18, 2003

Introducing the MAX Awards

I just found out about the 2003 MAX awards. From the Macromedia website:

As the latest highlight of the new Macromedia MAX Conference, we’re pleased to introduce the MAX Awards, an annual customer recognition program. The 2003 MAX Awards will highlight innovative, results-driven experiences built with Macromedia technology. This year’s winners will be announced at the Macromedia MAX 2003 conference held November 18-21 in Salt Lake City, Utah, where conference attendees will also have the opportunity to meet and talk with the creators of these award-winning experiences throughout the conference.

MAX Awards will be granted in the following eight categories:

Check out the MAX section of Macromedia's website for more information and to find out how to enter.

Posted by cantrell at 05:08 PM. Link | Comments (3) | References

July 14, 2003

ColdFusion at Flashforward 2003

I was in New York last week for Flashforward 2003, and I was really impressed with the number of ColdFusion developers who were there. I did a session on integrating Flash MX and ColdFusion MX using Flash Remoting, which I have done versions of at two other Flashforward conferences, and this was by far the biggest audience with the best questions that I have had yet. I was also glad to see that the audience was not just made up of ColdFusion developers who are learning Flash, but there were also a lot of Flash developers learning ColdFusion. Flash Remoting has really opened up a lot of doors for all kinds of developers.

Posted by cantrell at 01:22 PM. Link | Comments (3) | References

July 10, 2003

News From Flashforward

During the keynote at Flashforward in New York this morning, Mike Chambers announced that DRK 4 will be available to everyone (not just DevNet subscribers) for $99 when it launches this month. That means that DRK 3 and DRK 4 will be available to everyone at the same time, and will not require a subscription. Of course, you still save money by subscribing to DevNet, but at least now you have more flexibility.

Mike also demoed Macromedia Pollster, which will be available on DRK 4. The Pollster app lets you easily build polls, deploy them on your website, and both aggregate and chart responses. It is built with ColdFusion, Flash, and will come with a Dreamweaver extension to make embedding and configuring your polls easier.

Norm Meyrowitz mentioned the Royale initiative and showed and a set of very cool Flash forms that were generated just with XML. It even did navigation and data validation. You can find out more about Royale at http://www.macromedia.com/go/preview.

And of course there was Breeze Live, which I guess is best explained as a real-time meeting, presentation, and collaborative solution. Among other things, Breeze Live lets you share your desktop during a presentation, stream audio and video, and allow participants to interact in meetings. Extremely cool and powerful. You can find out more by reading the Macromedia press release.

Now I have to go work on my presentation (Integrating Macromedia Flash MX and ColdFusion) which I'm doing today at 4.

Posted by cantrell at 12:04 PM. Link | Comments (2) | References

July 08, 2003

On My Way Out the Door

In about 5 minutes, Mike Chambers and I will be heading up to New York for Flashforward 2003. I will be doing a session on integrating Flash with ColdFusion MX (through Flash Remoting). I think Mike is going to be doing Advanced Flash Remoting. Anyway, I'll post what I can, when I can, and I'll put my presentation online sometime next week after I get home. If you are going to the conference and you see me around, grab me and introduce yourself. I always enjoy putting faces to names.

Posted by cantrell at 10:04 AM. Link | Comments (0) | References

June 23, 2003

Overview of CFUN 2003

Michael Smith and rest of the TeraTech gang did an outstanding job with CFUN 2003 this year. I believe attendance was about 350 with a total of 40 sessions and several other events, including a great party Saturday night. I attended sessions by Matt Liotta, Hal Helms, Samuel Neff, Simon Horwith and Raymond Camden. I only wish I could have seen some of the other sessions that were going on in parallel to the sessions I attended.

Anyway, I don't know what Michael's plans are for next year, but if you can make it to CFUN 2004, I highly recommend it.

Posted by cantrell at 04:12 PM. Link | Comments (0) | References

June 20, 2003

On My Way to CFUN 2003

In a few hours, I'll be heading up to Maryland for CFUN 2003. Judging by the list of speakers, it should be a great event. If you live in the area and have nothing else going on this weekend, stop by. Bring the kids and start them learning from some of the best in the industry.

I don't know what kind of access I'll have at the conference, so I may be radio-silent for a couple days, but I will post a summary of the event as soon as I'm sufficiently connected again.

Posted by cantrell at 10:59 AM. Link | Comments (1) | References

June 18, 2003

Macromedia Product Manager Interviewed on SYS-CON Radio

Macromedia's own Jeff Whatcott was interview by SYS-CON radio at JavaOne last week. He discusses Royale, JRun and, of course, ColdFusion MX. You can check out the introduction (search for Whatcott -- he's about halfway down the page), or go directly to the MP3 file.

Posted by cantrell at 12:02 PM. Link | Comments (1) | References

June 03, 2003

TODCON and Flash Remoting

I attended a good session by Tom Muck yesterday on Flash Remoting. He did an excellent job of covering the basics. Tom is the author of Flash Remoting, The Definitive Guide which is being published by O'Reilly later this summer. I will post links to his presentation once it is online.

I'm doing a session on advanced Flash Remoting this afternoon. I now have a single presentation which is extremely comprehensive in scope, covering all the basics up through more advanced techniques like error handling, Flash Remoting and ColdFusion sessions, and using ColdFusion MX's authentication framework with Flash Remoting. It basically contains everything in my last Flashforward presentation with a an additional "advanced" section added. I will post it after the conference.

And now for the blackjack update. I managed to win another $20 last night, which means I'm up $40 for the trip. I know $40 doesn't sound like much, but you can't compare $40 to $0. Compare it to -$40 or -$100 or -$1,000, for that matter. Although I am only up $40, I have probably won (and lost) several hundred cumulative dollars in the process of getting there. So now I am trying to decide whether I should quit while I'm ahead, or further "invest" my $40.

Posted by cantrell at 03:35 PM. Link | Comments (1) | References

June 02, 2003

TODCON Las Vegas Off To a Hot Start

I mean that figuratively and literally. Literally, someone's rental car was reporting 112 degrees in Vegas yesterday afternoon. By the time I got in from nice breezy cool San Francisco, it was 102 degrees. I tried to walk to Walgreens to buy a telephone cord so I could work from my hotel room, and I had to turn back for fear of straying too far away from a source of water and air conditioning. Suddenly paying $5 for a phone cord from the hotel didn't seem like such a bad idea.

In a figurative sense, the conference is really very impressive. It's relatively small, which I like because it keeps the sessions intimate. Eric Meyer of Netscape did the keynote this morning, combined with a session called "The Standards Payoff" during which he discussed the advantages of using CSS layouts rather than tables. Basically he presented proof of how much bandwidth and time CSS layouts can save you. He is a very good speaker.

I met Ray West of Community MX yesterday. He is a great guy with a very good sense of humor. He is the one putting on this conference, and he has done an excellent job. I highly recommend TODCON for MX developers next time around.

I hit the blackjack tables with Kevin Schmidt last night. It was my first time playing, so he was showing me the ropes. I ended up $20 ahead, but I'm still here for 3 more days, so anything can happen.

I've had some great conversations with Brandon Hall, too. I love hanging out with Brandon at conference -- he always has a ton of cool projects going, and plenty to teach and offer.

I'm off to catch more presentations. More to come.

By the way, did you know that Netscape 4 is more than 6 years old now? (Eric mentioned that this morning.) How many people out there are still designing for it?

Posted by cantrell at 02:53 PM. Link | Comments (0) | References

May 29, 2003

Tonight's BACFUG Meeting

If you happen to be in San Francisco, I am speaking at the BACFUG meeting tonight at 7:00 (600 Townsend St. where Macromedia's offices are). I am going to be talking about the DRK, demonstrating ColdFusion DRK content, and giving away a free DRK 3. Last time I attended a BACFUG meeting, there was beer and food and other refreshments, so I assume there will be again tonight. And did I mention that I was going to be giving away a free DRK 3?

Posted by cantrell at 02:03 PM. Link | Comments (2) | References

May 27, 2003

CF_Europe and BACFUG

CF_Europe is only two days away (May 29th and 30th). I won't try to talk you into going because if you aren't already going, I doubt you will decide at the last minute to take off to London (unless you are already in the neighborhood). If you are already in the neighborhood, or if you have your own private jet, cruise on over to CF_Europe. They have a great lineup.

I can't make it because I will be speaking at a BACFUG meeting Thursday night (7:00, 600 Townsend St., San Francisco). I will be talking about the ColdFusion content on DRK 3, showing examples, and possibly even going over some Flash/ColdFusion projects, as well, depending on time and the mood of the crowd.

If you can't make it to London, come to San Francisco. If you can't make it to San Francisco, stay at home and watch the web cast. I will post the URL when I get it.

Posted by cantrell at 01:42 PM. Link | Comments (0) | References

April 10, 2003

Macromedia Announces MAX 2003

Macromedia announced the MAX 2003 conference yesterday which is to be held in November, in Salt Lake City. MAX is a new conference which combines DevCon and UCON. From Macromedia's webiste:

"MAX is your opportunity to get hands-on technical training, gain new skills, hear breaking news from Macromedia, network with peers and industry leaders, and ultimately become more successful developing and delivering applications using Macromedia products. Nowhere else can you find the volume and quality of information that will be available under one roof at MAX 2003."

Get more information, or submit a session proposal, here:
http://www.macromedia.com/macromedia/conference/

Posted by cantrell at 10:57 AM. Link | Comments (0) | References

January 13, 2003

Here's a Chance to Expense a Trip to Sydney

If you've been looking for an excuse to do see Sydney Australia, sign up for MXDU. Conversely, if you've been looking for an excuse to attend DevCon, book a vacation to Sydney. Justify it any way you have to -- just find a way to be there.

From the MXDU website:

"Do you know all there is to know about Macromedia MX technology? We have the people who do! It's finally here, a developers conference for Macromedia MX in the Asia Pacific Region. 19th-20th February 2003 in Sydney Australia."

If you're still not convinced, check out these links:

Posted by cantrell at 09:10 PM. Link | Comments (0) | References

January 06, 2003

First Day of Macworld!

Fellow Mac Fanatics, the 6th is the first day of the 2003 Macworld Conference and Expo in San Francisco. I was hoping to attend this year, but unfortunately I will not be able to make it. In order to try to capture some of the excitement of being there, however, I have put together a small Macworld contest. See the post for January 7th for details.

Posted by cantrell at 12:52 AM. Link | Comments (1) | References