Why would you want to do that? Bill Wagner is back to talk about C# with topics from his best-selling book, Effective C#. Carl and Richard chat with Greg Shackles about his work instrumenting mobile apps in production. Carl and Richard talk to Vishwas Lele about taking a comprehensive, model-driven approach to DevOps. While at NDC in Oslo, Carl and Richard talk to Barry Luijbregts about the huge array of features that exist in the Azure Platform-as-a-Service offerings. Carl and Richard chat with David McCarter about what it takes to be successful when you are interviewed for a job. He recently put forth the Essential Unified Process (EssUp). Then the folks at Interknowlogy got to work. Microsoft Product Manager for Visual Basic.NET, Jay Roxe drops by to talk about his work on the .NET Framework including System.Object, System.String, and System.Text.StringBuilder. Carl and Richard talk with Venkat Subramaniam, who has had a string of successful dnrTV episodes, and Andrew Hunt about Agile dos and don'ts. Carl and Richard talk to Jimmy Bogard about his experiences scaling an MVC web site to thousands of pages and thousands of users. Carl interviews Richard, who tells many stories of his experiences in electronics and computers. Be part of the Kickstarter and get yourself a hilarious and inspirational calendar! Maybe you've heard of them? There are more breaking changes than new features, but it should all be worth it, lining up for what comes in the next year. Carl and Richard talk to Jakub Jedryszek and Michael Flanakin about their work building the Azure Mobile App. While at the Louisville stop of the .NET Rocks! While at Connect in New York, Carl and Richard sat down with Paige Bailey and Seth Juarez to talk about the newly announced Visual Studio Tools for AI. Austin also talks about all the different voice-related products that Microsoft makes, it can be a confusing landscape. Carl and Richard talk to Chris Love about his work building mobile apps - in two styles! Visual Studio 2017 ships! Mixed reality is coming!

A great discussion with three successful software entrepeneurs with stories and advice about venturing out on your own in the wild and potentially lucrative world of software. So is every class a service? eaton 125 amp panel 30space imperial german militaria dealers. Carl and Richard talk to Layla Porter about her new role on the .NET Foundation board and the goals of the foundation to grow its membership, bring more open source projects into the fold, support the maintainers of those projects and to broaden the reach of .NET everywhere. Carl and Richard talk to Demis Bellot, who for the past couple of years has been full time on ServiceStack, and wow, a ton of development has been done! And even that is controversial, as Dan talks about focusing on delivering business needs, which may or may not involve code. It happens in filmmaking too! Carl and Richard talk to Brian Noyes about Microsoft's Patterns and Practices Kona Guidance for developing Windows Store Line of Business Apps. The conversation also turns to being respectful of existing code, recognizing that it is as good as it could be at the time and that there are always ways to make it better. Some are extremely small and can be attached to ordinary objects at a favorable vantage point. Octopus Deploy is all about getting your organization to continuous delivery - by automating every step. Udi Dahan is back to talk to the guys about scaling web applications. If you want to alter filters for a column, you must either modify the existing descriptor, or replace it. What the heck is Twitch, and why would you want to code on it? This inevitably leads to the hardest debate: Is your organization okay with data in the cloud? Carl and Richard talk to Tom Kerkhove about Azure Data Lakes. F# transpiles to JavaScript well, and can help you create very sustainable web apps! ); A relatively positioned element is an element whose computed position value is relative.The top and bottom properties specify the vertical offset from its normal >position; the left and right properties specify the horizontal. In the end its all JavaScript, and that is evolving also - Steve talks about how ECMA 6 looks a lot more like C# is there a middle point here we're all racing toward? The conversation digs into issues around version control for databases, keeping schema and reference tables in your source control system, and recognizing that database updates don't happen at the same time as application updates - there can be updates before and after, or otherwise independent of the application itself. Carl and Richard talk to James Montemagno, now a Microsoft employee since the Xamarin acquisition, about the on-going evolution of the Xamarin tools for building mobile and UWP applications. Tons of cool links below, check them out! This is what modern software systems are all about! Mark also talks about automated testing to shorten cycle times, how modern distributed source control can help you work faster and more! 46. Check out PEX on Microsoft Research, and get ready for Studio 2015! Rocky talks about changes in Magenic that helped him make the move he'd been thinking about for years. Jennifer talks about trying to build a community of women peers in Kansas City, only to discover a huge group of women who wanted to get involved in technology. In this show Kate gets hardcore, talking about C++, VC10, the Vista Bridge, and a few other technical gems. There's lots to learn about Hadoop, this show is just the starting point! Tricky, but possible! Tomas digs into other aspects of F#, comparing it to C#, and talks about the functional programming mind set and how it changes the way you think about coding. As Mark explains, this behavior isn't all that unusual - psychologists call it 'flow,' and it is a common state for athletes, musicians, writers and more. But as it's popularity grew, the outside world became interested in it also. TDD works! While on the ScotNetRocks tour, Carl and Richard talked to Chris McDermott about his experiences bringing agile to companies, and how that affected change. While at DevIntersection in Orlando, Carl and Richard talk to Billy Hollis about WPF. Carl and Richard met up with Mark Seemann in Copenhagen to chat about how organization structure affects the structure of software. Jean Paoli was part of the team at the W3C that created the XML specification. The conversation also moves to OWIN, the Open Web Server Interface. The conversation digs into how to understand not only the code of the existing application, but also the intent of the app - more focus on why things are the way they are, rather than just the how parts. As always, Pat brings his post-GI point of view to the conversation, which is always enjoyable. Cosmos DB is a globally distributed multi-modal database. The conversation ranges through the thinking around functional programming and new very functional features added - like TryList, as well as the more hybrid capabilities that let F# be a more general purpose language. Mark Miller gets down and dirty with real tactics for solving problems and maximizing your efficiency as an architect and developer. Carl and Richard talk to Cory House about his experiences building applications using Facebook's React library. Where has Visual Studio come from and where is it going? You think you do, but do you really! It's hot, but . well you know. Check out the great collection of links to different services and sites that Remy mentions in the discussion! Finally the conversation comes around the Chocolatey, aka apt-get for Windows.

Have a listen! Or you want granular control over who can call your API, how often, and how fast? Jillian talks about some of the high-profile security problems that have happened recently in the open-source world including log4j. How do you relate the data together? Dom starts out talking about how WebAPI has impacted the development of web services without much in the way of new security features - so he built some for everyone to use (check the links below). That's a lot of continuity! Rick Brewster, the lead developer of Paint.NET, discusses the open-source paint program from the beginning to the present and into the future. Carl and Richard talk to Gabriel Torok and Joe Kuemerle about what it takes to really know what's going on in your enterprise in real time. Can you be a software craftsman and not test? Fabio then dives into the challenges of putting different mindsets together to create synergy - where the result is greater than the sum of its parts. Can you really call it a job? How do you go about building tests that aren't so fragile that you have to rewrite them all after every build? LINQPad is an interactive development environment for .NET - originally focused on helping you build LINQ expressions. ASP.NET developers? Jonathan talks about the process they went through to decide on this particular architecture for the game, having done prototyping with Unity and Xamarin Native. Carl and Richard talk to GitHub denizen and former Microsoftie Phil Haack about what it means to build open source software. Mads talks about how a year is not a lot of time for building language features - but it does create a steady stream of new language ideas explored and tested before being finalized into the language. You can build tables of data to use for entry to challenge boundary testing, add additional assertions and validations - it's very clever! NASA continues to fund various research projects to improve modern airliners by increasing fuel efficiency, decrease emissions and noise. Do the labels developer, tester and IT separate us or unify us? Carl and Richard talk to Jamie Rees about his experiences creating Ombi - an open-source project that helps people managing Plex servers to handle requests from friends and family for more content. Russ talks with us about the Windows Server 2003 and Visual Studio.NET 2003 launch (recorded the same day), what's new in VS.NET 2003, upgrading, and what's new in the New England district. These features include geolocation and Web Open Font Format. What are the prospects going forward? While at Ignite in Orlando, Carl and Richard sat down with Kevin Cunnane and Eric Kang to talk about the latest set of tooling in SQL Server to facilitate incorporating SQL Server databases into your DevOps workflows. Soon! Meier (Project Lead), Alex Homer, David Hill, Jason Taylor, Prashant Bansode, Lonnie Wall, Rob Boucher Jr., Akshay Bogawat, Praveen Rangarajan (Test), and Dennis Rea (Edit). We quiz the previous DNR co-hosts and give out a bunch of free swag! After years of waning, .NET is on the rise - is it time for a renaissance? The conversation digs into the commitment Microsoft has to contributing to open source projects including Git itself - including moving Windows into the world's largest Git repository, a whole 300GB of source code! In the end, it's not the tech, it's the people that solve problems! Then Steven dives into different kinds of analysis, looking for the best quality code. Carl and Richard talk to Chris Klug about his experiences with different IaC approaches. Jez Humble is back and building a lean enterprise! In this interview, Raymond Chen discusses Raymond Chen! Carl and Richard interview Joe Fiorini, Jonathan Penn, Josh Walsh, and Andrew Kavanaugh about winning the 2008 Rails Rumble contest; then Chris Marinos and Mike Woelmer about their Paint Wars XNA game; and finally Corey Haines about his Pair Programming Tour. Yes, that's right, Steve found a way to write C# that runs in the browser with NO PLUGIN. Everything is plug-and-play! Among other accomplishments, Fritz is the author of the best-selling Essential ASP.NET published by Addison Wesley. Sorting - sort descriptors (fields by which the grid is sorted, and the direction). Clemens has the answers! which quickly turns into an indictment of the modern search engine, which, while useful, is bothered by the necessities of business with advertising and gaming of the system. Even if your organization isn't prepared to put their applications into production in the cloud, taking your testing environment there is possible and palatable! Agile Methodology can be overwhelming, and these guys introduce a much-needed dose of reality. Can software summarize documents? Prefix runs on your development workstation so that you can see what parts of your code are taking time - including how much is involved in communications time, query processing, and so on. One of the focuses of the book is to dig into core concepts in computing science that are actually valuable in your day-to-day development efforts, such as estimating the difficulty of a computing problem or describing core algorithmic concepts. Bryan Wilhite talks about his open-source projects, and his experiences in the trenches as a .NET developer. Ron Jacobs talks to Carl and Richard about the Windows Azure platform AppFabric, which provides secure connectivity as a service to help developers bridge cloud, on-premises, and hosted deployments. How do you automate DNS changes? Time for a Geek Out! Rory Blyth comes back to .NET Rocks! What if they weren't? And prepare for some CSS bashing! Great for making reliable off-line applications and onto dedicated kiosk-style hardware! Carl and Richard talk to Chris Gomez about the announcements at the Microsoft Build event around building software for the XBox One. Martin talks about Microsoft's thinking about why and how to add Git support to Visual Studio and TFS. So pour a cup and listen up! How do you protect the source code you ship in your applications? Steve explains how User Story Mapping helps with visualizing beyond a serial list of features into categories of features in the product. Getting coherent monitoring together. Mark Dunn, Rory Blyth, and a host of locals contribute to the show. Messaging is taking over the world! Carl and Richard chat with John about web components, an evolving standard to make JavaScript libraries more extensible and organized. Developing in Salesforce? Another is to use the OnStateChanged event. Brian Randell talks about Virtual Machines today and tomorrow, and boasts a bit about his new monster of a machine. Each of these tools builds on the other, starting at the lowest level with specific libraries, working up through package managers, configuring operating systems, even provisioning cloud services. Oh, and did she mention that they are planning on including support for non-relational (NoSQL) data stores? While at CodeMash, Carl and Richard collected some great stories. Mark talks about creating your application in a way that allows it to scale into the cloud, whether its running there or not. It starts with the manifest that helps create an icon on a desktop or smartphone to get access to the website, so your user doesn't have to type the URL anymore. It's a challenge we need to rise to: there are more new developers all the time! While at NDC, Carl and Richard talked to Philip Laureano about why he makes compilers! Elon Musk talks about creating an independent colony on Mars, requiring one million colonists. Rob Conery tells us why OpenID is a nightmare, and why he's stopped using it. Marc Mercuri is back to announce a great new website and program for developers on Microsoft Robotics Studio, RoboChamps! If you could get rid of the need to patch operating systems, wouldn't you? How reliable do you need to be? Are you just exposing your database to the internet through APIs? The conversation also dives into the controversy around the significant differences between Angular 1 and 2, although John sees it as simplification. JD talks about how he learned to be effective as a product manager at Microsoft, and how that lead to developing the Agile Life book. But why run your own infrastructure when you don't have to? While in Orlando for the .NET Rocks! Well, you knew this was coming - a geek out on the not-fun topic of nuclear accidents. Carl and Richard talk to Jeremiah Peschka about his project, CorrugatedIron, a .NET library that gives developers the ability to talk to Riak, Basho's highly-available Key-Value store. Carl and Richard talk to Paula Januszkiewicz as part of the Techorama online event about her work fighting ransomware. MFractor grows up! What's the alternative to antibiotics? He compares the modern web application approach of MVC with the old days, talks about strengths and weakenesses and how you can get the most out of your web application. Scott Ambler from IBM talks about the Agile Process Maturity Model, which defines three levels of Agile methodology. Julia talks about how Visual Studio got started, its evolution into .NET, with some great stories along the way. They talked about the differences and similarities between the Java and .NET ecosystems, the origins of their podcast (and ours), and more. Carl and Richard interview a number of speakers and staff at the Tulsa TechFest 2006. Giovanni talks about how the client-side of OpenSilver is different from Silverlight, using Web Assembly to eliminate the need for the plug-in. Great thinking from a remarkable set of minds! A key part of the process is to automate everything you can, including deployment. Suz also talks about her fascination with 3D printers and their relationship to IoT and the maker movement in general. Carl and Richard talk with Frans Bouma, author of LLBLGen, a very popular ORM modeling and code generation tool for .NET. There's a reason all the big web sites have switched to HTTPS all of the time. The conversation digs into the philosophical differences of Node, JavaScript outside the browser, and starting from a blank slate of services, rather than the 'everything-on' model of yester-year. Mark discusses techniques for getting into flow faster, so that you're less sensitive to interruption, and the conversation ultimately spins into thinking around how we can practice more effectively using flow and put in the hours it takes to become truly proficient in our area of focus. Are you an imposter? And speaking of Azure, Carbonite lives on Azure and uses Stackify for instrumentation. For sure! Jeremiah starts out the discussion pointing to a blog post he's done on the Basics of Hadoop (check the links) and how the focus of Hadoop is on the cloud - pre-configured Hadoop solutions in the cloud make life easier, but you have to get the data there. Now how do you get confidence? It would be great to get an answer to the white paper published by the Performance and Scalability Working Group. The conversation digs into the value of recruiters and difference between good ones and bad ones. Jon and Dan talk about smart device past, present, and future, and offer real insights into and development strategies for development with the .NET Compact Framework. The GridState field of the event argument provides the current grid state so you can store it. Dan talks about how Microsoft 365 knows a lot about what's going on in your organization, and how you as a developer can take advantage of the existing file handling, messaging, and interconnects to simplify your projects and make them more visible to users. Tim Heuer from the Silverlight team at Microsoft talks to Carl and Richard about the current state of Silverlight, and offers his perspective on using Silverlight among other things. While at DevTeach in Montreal, Carl and Richard sat down with a panel of mobile development experts to talk about where mobile development is at. The conversation digs into the idea that the goal of programming is not typing, but rather thinking hard about understanding a problem and building an efficient way to solve it. The conversation spans from his experiences with speech recognition systems, the Tablet PC, microphone arrays, and neural networks to toys, home automation, books, and toys. INETA is run by a board of user group leaders, elected by their peers, and supported by Microsoft Corporation and other sponsors. Part of the conversation is BuildMaster, which is free for up to five seats, providing the glue to get automated deployment working effectively. Carl and Richard talk to Ted Faison as part of the whole back to basics initiative at DNR about Event-Driven design. Recorded live at devLink in Nashville, Tennessee. Matthew talks about the different skills and tools needed to build a VR space, including 3D modelling. James Kovacs is back to talk about how the idea of Convention over Configuration has transformed the way we think about software development, leading to better usability and productivity. The Heavy just barely sneaks into the super heavy lift class, and it's flight has caused a bit of a kerfuffle - both Russia and China have announced new super heavy lift rockets. The individual tabs below show how you can use the state to programmatically set the grid The first conversation is with Peter Moskovits, talking about using HTML 5 WebSockets to build real bi-directional communicating applications in the browser. Carl and Richard talk to Joe Duffy about Pulumi, a tool that lets you use your favorite programming languages to provide Configuration-as-Code. Shawn talks about all the different approaches we've taken over the years to communicate over the wire, whether with SOAP, REST or all the other flavors in-between. The conversation turns to MatLab and Revolution Analytics language R. R is focused on machine learning, it's not a general purpose language. Daniel talks about a bunch of the key features from .NET 6, including smaller runtime, Hot Reload, and rending components from JavaScript. Brian Noyes catches us up on the state of WPF, talking about the new Composite WPF project (codename Prism), followed by a discussion on the state of Workflow Foundation (WF). The Google Compute Engine handles that, with Windows as an option coming soon! Julie digs into how EF Core has the same relationship with EF 6.x as ASP.NET Core has to ASP.NET 4.x - they are parallel versions aimed at different goals. Phil Japikse can help! It's not just about goodness of Windows 8, it's about the reality of what is hard and easy. How do you get into test automation? Mark walks through some core concepts related to user interface design and the design of the application as a whole, helping users stay focused on what they need to do without interrupting or confusing them along the way. Great conversation with a guy who's built a ton of awesome software! Roy Osherove talks about his experience moving his software company's build servers into the cloud. Oh, and it works for mobile browsers also, so you can experiment with rendering on multiple phones at once, and see how the pages really look while you make changes. How can you make machine learning simpler? How does the .NET Foundation change the way you build software? Carl and Richard talk to Glenn Howes about Apple's new programming language for IoS and MacOS: Swift. VR is here, are you ready? Cory talks about how he appreciates the lack of ceremony around GraphQL and it's strengths in dealing with a diversity of clients and bandwidth availability. The conversation starts out discussing how mobile apps are even more performance sensitive than regular web pages, because mobile devices typically have less bandwidth and more limited processing power for rendering. Not by a long shot. Brice talks about the important elements of gaming, including the art, user experience and game play itself. You need all three to some degree, great games do all of them well. John Bristowe from Microsoft Canada talks about a new initiative from Microsoft to help .NET developers further their career. Check it out! Richard talks through some fundamental cell biology to be able to set the stage for what antibiotics are, where they come from and how they work. Identity continues to evolve! There's a great community out there to help you learn more and focus on the right things - join in! Carl and Richard chat with Rick Strahl about his latest efforts to build mobile web applications. Good stuff! Ian discusses testing in a hexagonal architecture and how Test Driven Development (TDD) works so well with the separation of concerns that ports and adapters offers. While at CodeMash, Carl and Richard talk to Phil Japikse about Behaviour Driven Developement. This leads to a conversation about Event Tracing for Windows, which Dina uses primarily to take measurements of different applications running on Windows machines - but you can have your app add to the ETW stream as well. What is slowing your web site down? Tess has moved on from the mad debugging skills she blogged about to focus on Kinect and Windows Phone 7. more geeky and less freaky! And at the end, a quick discussion about Humanitarian Toolbox and their awesome open source projects to help save lives - you can help! The conversation then digs into the challenges around OAuth 2 and the challenges of building specifications by committee when you're dealing with security. How do you estimate your projects? She walks through the evolution of identity concepts and how the various peices are being implemented. PowerGUI is a UI for writing PowerShell scripts and PowerGUI VSX ties PowerGUI into Studio. How do you make the Single Page Application (SPA) better? Popular applications today need to be spartan and direct to help the user. Mark also talks a bit about the history of audio gear around AdLib, Soundblaster, Voyetra and the like. Carl and Richard talk to Anthony van der Hoorn about GitHub Codespaces - the consolidation of a number of online development solutions from Microsoft including Visual Studio Online. The rumors of the death of WebForms is greatly exaggerated! Lots! Neil talks about the challenges of SharePoint in the cloud, including multitenancy, claims-based security and scalability. The conversation moves onto Google's Web Toolkit and App Engine, products Brad spent his first year at Google on. Azure is good - but tooling makes it great! The conversation explores the evolution of MassTransit and the way the Enterprise Service Bus has evolved. You need to get engaged with the project on CodePlex and actually get to know the team and where the project is at to hope to make a difference there. INETA welcomes all facets of the .NET user community, from developers and architects to project managers and IT professionals. ), the potential power is huge - taking existing PHP code and being able to compile it down to the CLR. You can get 10% off of Rachel's books and courses with the code NETROCKS. And how does it apply to numbers? Check it out! Great insights from Mr. Skeet! While at NDC in London, Carl and Richard moderated a panel of Ben Hall, Peter Mounce, Jeff French and Enrico Campidoglio to talk about the state of DevOps in the .NET world.
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