Happy “Windows 8 Consumer Preview” Day

by Kurt Brockett

It’s like Christmas around here at Vertigo.  I know the the new iPad 3 is coming out next week and Mobile World Congress is going on right now but as everyone knows we are  heavy Windows users.  In fact we are doing some great work with Windows 8 so this morning you know everyone was refreshing like mad trying to get to the download link.

Here are the links for the Windows 8 Consumer Preview : http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-8/iso and also the other piece of the puzzle

Visual Studio 11 Beta : http://www.microsoft.com/visualstudio/11/en-us/downloads

Speaking of puzzles (yes I know that was a lame segue) one of our developers Tim Greenfield (@timgreenfield) was one of the winners of the First Apps Contest.  You can check out a couple of snaps from the video below.  Check out the full video here (link).  Congrats Tim!

NuGet projects from Jason Jarrett

by Kurt Brockett

Last week we mentioned Jason’s month long series on interesting NuGet projects that he has found : NuGet Project Uncovered with Jason Jarrett.  Following up on that post we wanted to highlight the final 3 projects he has covered.  The unique part about these projects is that they were all created by Jason himself.  Check them out below:

NuGet Project Uncovered: SpecificationExtensions.[MSTest | NUnit | Xunit]

NuGet Project Uncovered: EventAggregator.Net

NuGet Project Uncovered: DumpToText

Own A Color – VERTIGO RED

by Kurt Brockett

A few months ago a very cool charity site was put together by UNICEF and Glidden…Own a Color.  The core calculation came from the fact that “Did you know…Your average computer, smartphone and tablet can display 16.7 million colors? That’s a lot of colors!” (about)  What better way to raise money than start a campaign to “own” those colors with all proceeds going to UNICEF.  The thing that works is that people really do have an affinity and “ownership” of certain colors.  At Vertigo we have our brand colors so we jumped at the opportunity to own our primary accent color which we named VERTIGO RED.  You can check out the color below:

Before we jumped in and purchased VERTIGO RED, Scott Stanfield (@seesharp), our CEO snapped up FESTAL (fe57a1).  I guess he had HTML5 and parties on the brain as the description reads “F357A1 (or Festal) is the classic hot pink used by HTML5 Boilerplate. Meaning: pertaining to a feast, festival, holiday, or gala.”  Awesome.

 

NuGet Project Uncovered with Jason Jarrett

by Kurt Brockett

Back in early January, Jason Jarrett (@staxmanade), one of our Senior Software Engineers here at Vertigo started an interesting series titled NuGet Project Uncovered.  Throughout the month of January and February he’s totaled up 23 posts of interesting NuGet projects that he’s run across while following the NuGet feed.  You can check out the introduction to the series here (link) and see more in the blog archive on his page over on the right sidebar.

As a preview here is a snippet about some of his selection criteria for the posts:

Some reasons I may have chosen a project:
  • I could potentially see myself investigating its usage someday.
  • It solved a problem in an interesting way.
  • Preferred small, focused, unique packages.
  • Preferred projects that were Open Source as in FREE.
    • Although I didn’t bother to look at any of the licenses so be sure to read into those before you use any yourself.
  • Preferred projects that have a “Project Site” where I could browse the source code see examples or even documentation.
    image
  • For some reason if I saw it was hosted on GitHub I preferred those to sites that had their own dedicated location (Can’t explain why – just did…)

Great info Jason!

 

Vertigo Partners with NBC Sports to Live-Stream Football’s Big Day

NBC Sports featured Vertigo’s Emmy®-nominated video player (for Sunday Night Football) to live-stream the NFL post-season including two wildcard games, the Pro Bowl in Hawaii, and the final showdown in Indianapolis. Vertigo is excited to work with NBC Sports to bring HD quality video along with multiple camera angles, interactive timelines, VOD highlights, and everyone’s favorite - the commercials, online for the first time!

Live HD Video

Check out the Links below for information about this great experience -

[UPDATED]

In addition to all the big press above, we received a nice personal note this morning from a regular fan:

My family, which does not have Cable TV, enjoyed the live stream experience very much.

We watch the football more as a “mass culture” event, not because we actually care about the game, or even sports in general, but even with this detachment from the fan’s perspective, we found that the overall experience of the stream “app” made for an engaging, exciting and memorable game.

Please let anyone there who worked on this project know that there are some geeky fans out there who regarded the work of creating and delivering the streaming experience far more highly than the game itself!

Thanks Mr. Focazio! We’re glad you and a lot of football fans enjoyed it!

 

 

Vertigo turns 15!

by Scott Stanfield

Fifteen years ago today, I started Vertigo with Cyndi Sunderman and Chris Idzerda in Point Richmond, California. We thought it would be cool to share a few artifacts and stories from our journey to where we are now.

I was working [as a waitress in a cocktail bar] at a consulting company in downtown San Francisco in early 1997. With the help of a small loan from a friend (thanks Mike Moscowitz), I was able to quit with enough in the bank to purchase a few necessities and pay the bills.

We kept our first canceled check—most people keep their first income check, but considering this was for Fry’s, I thought it was geeky ironic.

It’s clear from the perspective of history, our first purchase should have been a ping pong table, not a fax machine.

We found an inexpensive office building in downtown Point Richmond, just blocks from my house to set up shop. An all-brick building and foundation was probably not the best choice in earthquake-prone California.

Even 15 years ago, we had digital cameras. Marvel at the quality of the images. That’s me on the left, Chris with the banana, and Cyndi with our son.

We’ve suffered through two awkward identities before settling on our current, and final OGITREV logo (we pronounce it OH-git-rev). I “designed” the first one.

We had a little internal celebration today. Sabered a few bottles of champagne and toasted to our history and future success. I’m very proud of the fact that there are 11 people at Vertigo with 10+ years of service. And 18 that have been here for half our company history.

At 15 we’re almost out of our awkward teenage years; just one more until we get our drivers license.

Scott

NBC Sports Talk – Gizmodo Best iPhone Apps

by Kurt Brockett

Back before the break we were pleased to see one of our clients make the Gizmodo Best iPhone Apps list.  Each month Gizmodo updates their list to include the top apps in a variety of different categories.  The NBC Sports Talk app for iPhone was added in the Lifestyle category.  Pretty cool to be added to a list described as “the absolutey essential apps.”  What started as development for the iPhone has now also stretched into Vertigo developing the application for Android as well.  You can check out both of the apps here:  iPhone and Android.

Vertigo Metro Design – msdn magazine

By Kurt Brockett

This past week we received the January 2012 edition of msdn magazine at the office.  Much to our surprise we found one of our projects (and employees) staring right back at us.

DevExpress has an advertising campaign going with their new DXv2 suite of tools and that happens to include an attached leaflet on the cover.  They snagged a screenshot from some of our recent work together to highlight.  You can read more about the work at this post:  New Work: DevExpress WinForms Metro Demo App.  It’s great to see our work on screen or in this case in print!

We’re really starting to see an uptick in interest around Metro Design language and principles.  With Nokia pushing harder on Windows Phone 7 there seems to be a noticeable and measured growth on the Windows Phone platform (Another 100,000 WP7 Facebook users added, now 8-9 million phones out there? – WMPoweruser).  The new Xbox dashboard and video apps are now metro (Fly Or Die: The New Xbox “Metro” UI – Techcrunch.com) and the biggie, Windows 8 is starting to really pick up steam as we move closer to a Beta next month (Microsoft: We’re So Excited About Windows 8, We Can Hardly Speak – All Things D).

Stay tuned to The Wire as we continue to develop new work and information about the upcoming shift in the Microsoft platform and the Metro Design language and principles.

 

CES

by Kurt Brockett

Is there really much to say?  Out – Tuesday 12:40p,  Back (hopefully) – Friday 12:45p.

I really liked the tagline that MIX used to carry “A 72 Hour Conversation” so we’ll just say we hope CES is “A 72 Hour and 5 Minute Conversation”.

Looking forward to connecting with our existing customers and partners and just as importantly meeting a few new ones.  Please shoot me a note kurt@vertigo.com and we’ll try and connect up.  Safe travels everyone!

 

You are responsible for making that feature work. Write a test. Just do it…

originally posted by Jason Jarrett (@staxmanade): http://staxmanade.blogspot.com/2012/01/you-are-responsible-for-making-that.html

Today the PM of a project I am working on sent an email with a small list of issues that we needed to get resolved before shipping an early build to the customer for a weekly review. In his list of issues MY NAME was tagged next to a feature that I KNOW was working. I dev’d it, tested, saw it work.

Now the project I’m working on encourages unit tested code, which is a fantastic project to be on since I am a big proponent of Unit/Integration/Automated tests. Heck I wrote a tool to help run them easier (StatLight).

What I did.

The problem was this. I dev’d a feature out in like 5 minutes, took about 2 seconds to decide if I should write a unit test to prove my feature worked and this is where I failed. Manually verified my change checked in the production code without its test and I was hurriedly moved on to the next task.

About 20 min later I get a quick I.M. from a co-worker saying he had a small merge conflict in the file I just checked-in. Quickly told him how to get around his merge issue (not realizing after he checked in) that my “quick 5min dev task” was accidently removed in the merge.

What I SHOULD have done!

What I should have done was write the 2 lines of test code first(you can argue test after/test first, I prefer test-first). Proven my code wasn’t working, by running the test, and then implement the 5 min feature making the test pass. Then when my co-worker ran into his merge issue.

Test would have failed telling him his merge didn’t go as planned.

This would have also avoided

  • PM wouldn’t have had to discover the issue, Screenshot and write up an email.
  • I wouldn’t have had to peruse source control history to understand why my “working” feature wasn’t working.
  • I wouldn’t have had to willingly confess my sins in this post.

If your feature doesn’t have a coinciding automated test. How do you know it’s still working?

Happy Testing!

To comment please check out the original post by Jason here : http://staxmanade.blogspot.com/2012/01/you-are-responsible-for-making-that.html