…was pretty good.
Hi-lights:
- Scott’s Power Shell
presentation. Filled a lot of cracks in the pavement of my power shell
knowledge. Maybe this will get me using power shell more and I can reach
critical mass.
- Wilco’s Iron
Ruby presentation. I fealt dumb and lazy after this. How come I can’t
build a compiler in a few months. I had the feeling, in this presentation,
that I was in the presence of a future computer science super star.
- Jeff
Berkowitz’s Poker Bot presentation. I wish this had lasted about 3
hours longer. Too bad I don’t actually know how to play poker. I may have
understood more. Never the less, I knew enough to recognize some common
patterns with securities trading. At a high level, it’s all about
information theory. Just when we were getting to the good part, though, we
had to break. I caught a glimpse of what looked like a hard coded strategy
– from poker book strategy to C#. My next step would be to take a bunch of
those strategies and put them in a genetic program, or even more like what
I do, break them down by information atom and put them in a neural net to
get weighted, running against Poker
Academy. Poker Academy
can’t beat the best players. Maybe it would be better to train bots
against real poker game data, or on real online poker networks. Awesome
presentation.
Low-lights:
- Too
hot. Didn’t want to stay for outdoor BBQ. Bailed.
- Too
short. Day 2 would have been good.
- The
hotel I was looking forward to going to was full. We stayed in a really
bad hotel and paid too much. Maybe planning ahead and making reservations
is a good idea sometimes.
I sure hope we get to see another Seattle Code Camp, a *Con,
or something along those lines before the year is over. If not, I might start
driving to the Portland
.NET users group meetings (in addition to ssdotnet.)