Posts Tagged ‘SharePoint Retreat’
Thursday, July 15th, 2010



To help promote the community aspect of SharePoint Retreat and share the knowledge and lessons learned beyond those that were lucky enough to attend we offer a prize for the best sharing of knowledge. This sharing could be in the form of a web cast, blog post, white paper or even presentation at a user group.

As this was the first SharePoint Retreat the prize is really pretty fantastic.

 

VS2010Ultimage_web

Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate with MSDN subscriptions valued at $11,899 each!*

The prize was donated, indirectly, by Microsoft, I was sent a number of copies to give away for being an MVP and taking part in testing Microsoft Visual Studio 2010.

There were some great posts:

@WorTony : SharePoint Retreat

@Weshackett: Review of the day

@nigel_price: SPRetreat London

 

 

 But there was one that really stood out and provided some great code samples and “how to”s from the day 

… and the winner of the prize is

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Tuesday, July 13th, 2010



Part 1 – SharePoint Retreat

Part 2 – What a day!

Part 3 – Going forward

Retrospective

For any activity I find the best way to improve is to review the positives and the negatives and then action the most important parts. Over the years of doing this I have found that a couple of techniques work very well – especially for new teams or groups that don’t normally work together.
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Tuesday, July 13th, 2010



Part 1 – SharePoint Retreat

Part 2 – What a day!

Part 3 – Going forward

The Problem

Cross sell component

============================

Requirements:

A client wants to be able to have a component on a page which can be used to drive traffic to other areas of their site.

The setting of the problem actually had a fairly big impact on the way the day went – we captured some some ideas in the feedback at the end of the day that I will cover in Part 3.
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Monday, July 12th, 2010



Part 1 – SharePoint Retreat

Part 2 – What a day!

Part 3 – Going forward

Only a couple of months ago myself (@AndrewWoody) and James (@draken) were talking about ways we could help development practices in the SharePoint community. Being avid agile enthusiasts we take a close interest in other events and activities outside of the SharePoint world. One event really caught our attention, it focused on improving techniques, it had a simple format that could be tailored and was very much community focused.

In May we announced it, the worlds first SharePoint Retreat!

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Tuesday, May 4th, 2010



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We are proud to announce the world’s first SharePoint Retreat!

The first event is taking place in London on Saturday 10th July. Don’t delay places are filling up fast with a limit of 16 people.

Register for SharePoint Retreat London in London, United Kingdom  on Eventbrite 

The aim of SharePoint Retreat is to help developers practice the fundamentals of software development, but like all things in the SharePoint community we intend to keep this SharePoint focused, so developers practice the fundamentals of SharePoint development

What is SharePoint Retreat?

The idea is not our own, more information can be found about the original Code Retreat at http://www.coderetreat.com/ – we have just given it a SharePoint flavour. 

It has a simple objective:  provide a day-long event that is focused on practicing the fundamentals of SharePoint development.

Why SharePoint Retreat?

We want to bring SharePoint development to the fore, to make developers want to work with SharePoint and to show that doing SharePoint development does not mean you have forego any plans to become a software craftsman.

How does it work?

A group of SharePoint developers – That means you! - gather at the Retreat with laptop in hand ready to code.

  • Problem:  TBC – the problem will be SharePoint related and can vary between Retreats
  • Retreat lasts from 9am until 5pm followed by SharePint
  • Each coding session will last 1 hour
  • Each session coders will pair program

Some rules!

  • code is deleted after each session,  its about learning the techniques and not getting code samples
  • Encourage techniques like TDD where appropriate
  • programming pairs are swapped at each session

on the day

  • 9:00 – 9:30 Intro to the day
  • 9:30 – 10:30 session 1
  • 10:30 – 10:45 retrospective
  • 10:45 – 11 :45 session 2
  • 11:45 – 12:00 retrospective
  • 12:00 – 1:00 Lunch – with brown bag presentations
  • 1:00 – 2:00 session 3
  • 2:00 – 2:15 retrospective
  • 2:15 – 3:15 session 4
  • 3:15 – 3: 30 retrospective
  • 3:30 – 4:30 session 5
  • 4:30 – 5:00 wrap up
  • 5:00 – late ShareFood and SharePint

in the sessions

session 1 and 2

The area of SharePoint may be unfamiliar to some people, others may have done something like it before.  The aim of the first two sessions are to allow people to understand how they are going to approach the problem and what the final solution could look like.  Some pairs may try and implement it, others will spike out ideas and try to solve specific challenges.

At the retrospectives each pair will have a few minutes to discuss what they did and any problems they could not solve.

Lunch

During lunch the coders get to sit back and relax whilst the facilitator demonstrate techniques or ideas in a couple of short brown bag sessions.

session 3, 4 and 5

continue with the problem and looking to refine some of the scenarios and techniques.  The aim is to learn and practice techniques that will improve the knowledge and experience of the coders.  If you don’t complete the problem it’s not an issue – if you complete the problem then look for new challenges or refine the techniques.

After the event

Any gathering of SharePoint people and you are likely to find a SharePint – the facilitator will find a suitable venue for people to unwind, drink beer and SharePint – hopefully more SharePoint people will be in the area so that they can brag about the new found talents.

What Next?

If you can be in London on Saturday 10th July 2010, you’re a SharePoint developer and you fancy spending a day with other like-minded people honing you development skills.   Sign up.

This first event is limited to 16 coders – so be quick.  

If you fail to make the first 16, put your name down on the waiting list.   We do ask that people who have signed up but for whatever reason can’t make it please make the space available to others.

How Much?  – Its Free :)

Best of all this is a community activity,  we are funding this event through sponsorship in order that we can provide the places to coders F.O.C

The sponsors for this inaugural event are

cScape Logo

providing the venue and internet access – and Ben Robb

21apps Inspire Community

providing the food – and Andrew Woodward