Last year my VW Beetle had a major engine overhaul and afterwards it had problems starting. I finally tackled the problem last week, so it now starts and runs fine again. We drove around the area yesterday and I took the following picture.

I attended a WPF seminar that was organized by one of the companies I work for. It was hosted by Erno de Weerd from InfoSupport. I was very impressed by the theoretical and practical knowledge of Erno about the material. I can recommend Erno as a teacher for organizations that like to know more about WPF.
WPF is quite different from existing Microsoft based GUI frameworks (Win32, MFC, WTL, Windows Forms). It’s good to have a good background knowledge to be able to leverage the potential of this great new architecture. The following books may help you to get you started.

The first WPF book I bought was Applications = Code + Markup (A Guide to the Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation) by Charles Petzold (Microsoft Press, ISBN: 0-7356-1957-3). Although this book explains the ideas of WPF rather good it has two major flaws:
After a while I ordered Windows Presentation Foundation Unleased by Adam Nathan. This book also describes the fundamentals of WPF, but it is much more accessible, because it uses XAML from the beginning and uses full color screenshots that show what do code does. If you need a good WPF book, then order Adam’s book. It’s definitely worth it.
Welcome to my weblog. My name is Ramon de Klein and I am a professional software developer since 1994. I always worked on Microsoft technologies and I want to share my findings in this weblog. I currently work on two different WPF based projects, so I expect most posting will be about WPF and related issues.