Dew Drop – October 7, 2013 (#1,639)

Top Links

 

Web Development

 

XAML

 

Miscellaneous .NET

 

Design / Methodology / Testing

 

Other Mobile Platforms

 

Podcasts / Screencasts / Videos

 

Community / Events

 

Database

 

PowerShell

 

Miscellaneous

 

More Link Collections

 

The Geek Shelf

The Dew Review – ’The Snugg’ Case for Nexus 7

It must be review season around here or something…

Last week I received a new case for my first generation Nexus 7 tablet. It is an orange leather case and flip stand from The Snugg. There are Snugg cases available for most popular smartphones and tablets (iPhone, iPad, Kindle, Nexus 7, Nexus 4, Surface, etc.) Here are a few unboxing shots.

WP_20130930_001WP_20130930_003WP_20130930_004WP_20130930_005

So far, I have been very impressed with the case. It doesn’t make the tablet feel noticeably heavier, and I worry less about dropping it than I did with the standard rubbery case from Google. The Nexus 7 fits snugly inside the Snugg, and there are openings to reach all of the important buttons, ports, etc. The case is very well built. I don’t feel like it is going to fall apart of from opening and closing the case the way some cases do over time.

The case functions well whether holding open like a book, holding in one hand with the cover folded around back (there is actually  a strap to slip your hand into for extra security – you can see it in the fourth picture above), or propped open on a tabletop with the flip lip tucked into the tab on the back of the case.

Here is a picture of the case with the Nexus 7 inside. My kids love the Toy Story Andy’s Room active background from the Google Play store.

WP_20131001_001

If you are in the market for a case for your smartphone or tablet, you should put The Snugg on your list of cases to consider. They are prices competitively compared to other well-made cases.

 

 

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one or more of the products or services mentioned above for free in the hope that I would mention it on my blog. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe my readers will enjoy. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.

The Dew Review – RavenDB 2.x Beginner’s Guide

I just finished reading Packt Publishing’s RavenDB 2.x Beginner’s Guide by Khaled Tannir. I haven’t used RavenDB in a project before, so when I was asked to review the book, I jumped at the opportunity. NoSQL in general, and RavenDB in particular, is something I have meaning to start learning.

3798OS

I really liked the format of the book. Each section starts with a brief introduction of the topic, continues with a  step by step set of instructions complete with code snippets and/or screen shots, and finishes up with a deeper explanation of what was done and what happened behind the scenes. The instructions part of each section is titled “Time for action”, the deeper dive is titled “What just happened?”, and some sections also have a “Have a go hero” challenge. These challenges give the reader a more advanced task to perform based on the one just completed and explained. Most of these challenges include some tips to get you started.

In some of the more introductory sections, the format felt a little repetitive, but it’s easy enough to skim through those parts if you’re comfortable with them already. For the more advanced topics, it’s a great way to re-enforce the material.

The book begins with an overview of RavenDB, covers the basics of NoSQL at a conceptual level and compares and contrasts its strengths with relational databases. Next it moves into the Management Studio… getting it installed and running, and gives an overview of what can be performed in the Studio. The next several chapters focus on using RavenDB within .NET and Visual Studio. Indexes, queries, and documents are all covered at a good level of detail. Chapters seven through 10 cover less code-focused aspects of RavenDB including deployment, scaling and profiling. There is a chapter on accessing RavenDB via a RESTful interface over HTTP rather than through the .NET API and the book finishes with a “Putting it all together” chapter where the author walks through building an ASP.NET MVC application with RavenDB as the data source.

The book is well-written, organized and an all-around good read. I think it targets a large number of developers – those who are experienced in .NET but have little or no exposure to NoSQL or RavenDB. If you fall into that category, I highly recommend picking up this title. When you see that Oren Eini, the main man behind RavenDB, is one  of the reviewers, you know it’s going to be a technically solid tutorial.

 

Mastodon
github.com/alvinashcraft