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by Scott Hanselman.
Original Post: More Magic in Morocco at the NDC
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The conference's second, day was today, with my session présentée
en anglais, avec traduction simultanée by U.N. Certified Translators.
My translators were very nice and very good. I met with them beforehand and
we discussed a glossary of terms, agreed on a few things, then began. I really
recommend meeting your translator if you ever find yourself in a real-time situation.
They are truly your voice, and they speak for you. Why not meet your voice and
see what they have to say? :)
After my talk on Internationalization (i18n) in ASP.NET, Mo and I hung out with our
wonderful new friend Rachid from
Algeria. Rachid Berkani Ingénieur développement à Cogitar
en Algérie, Depuis plus de 10 ans comme développeur et chef de projet dans
le développement et intégration d’applications and is a very
kind person as well! We had a very long walk and talk, and visited the Hassan
II Mosque again (we drove by before) and walked around it. It was afternoon
prayer, and as non-Muslims we stayed out of the way. Visiting hours are in the
morning.
You literally have to see it to believe it. It's immense, and it's half built
on the sea, and half on land.
The Mosque juts out of the port and is largely over the water.
There is no picture I could show you that would accurately express the scope of this.
There is a man to the left of this side - that might help give a sense of scale.
This is one of the small fountains to the left of the Mosque.
Here is the pool where we had lunch, outside the Hyatt's conference center.
The conference center, and the entire conference is pure class. Lunch, while
crowed, was very good.
Here is Ingo, Clemens and myself. Sadly while I share German/Austrian ancestry with
these gentlemen, I did not inherit this thing called "cool."
The conference rooms are nice; here's the Moroccan Minister of Education speaking
to the group.
We were also blessed enough to go to dinner at Malek's Parents' house. If you
can call it a house; it's beautifully decorated palace. The food topped
Chez Ali - it was plentiful and wonderful and truly authentic. His parents were
very gracious hosts and incredibly thoughtful.