The idea is to stop worrying about virtual machines and operating systems and focus on the stuff you really need. CQRS is an enterprise application pattern derived from the DDD movement, where responsibility for data integrity and consistency lies soley in the application itself. But then the tricky part comes - how do you get your users to take advantage of them! CQRS is the acronym for Command and Query Responsibility Segregation. Carl and Richard talk to Tim Huckaby about the on-going revolution of applications utilizing Kinect. When people are misunderstood, fear and resistance almost always follow. Pual Stubbs from Microsoft talks about the marriage of Silverlight and Sharepoint. Carl and guest co-host Mark Dunn talk with Charles Petzold about the life of the father of modern computing, Alan Turing. Method profiling has been around for awhile, but it takes a lot of time and tuning to get right - and running profilers on production servers can be a career limiting behavior. What does it take to keep AngularJS moving forward? Oren talks about the huge number of changes that have happened in version 3 of RavenDB - it's come a long way from a little transactional document store of years ago! After a quick detour down the SOPA discussion, Rob fills the boys in on how the SDL maps neatly to a regular development lifecycle, just including security every step of the way. Carl and Richard talk to Marc Mercuri and Mark Simms about resilient cloud architecture. Karl starts at the top with one of the main reasons you should consider Azure - physical security. Then on to the main event - Fukushima. He also reminds us that if you own Visual Studio 2010, you own LightSwitch, so take it out for a spin! We are also treated to a short after-dinner converation with Ted Pattison, George Bullock, Joe Hummel, and David Chappell. But first, a little history, James first getting involved in mobile development, finding Xamarin, culminating with being hired by Xamarin and going on the road trip with .NET Rocks! While we all agree that the best way to learn to program is to actually program, what are the best tools to start out with? More than just element inspection, the Chrome Developer Tools let you look at your web application executing on the browser. Whether its mobile, web or desktop, you need great UX! PROSE uses machine learning to understand how you are changing your code and finds ways to help with those changes. MongoDB is a non-relational database. How much do you need to know about design? Carl and Richard chat about the state of space-based power, reviewing a number of designs going back to the 1970s. Charles talks about his book, "The Annotated Turing: A Guided Tour through Alan Turing's Historic Paper on Computability and the Turing Machine. Do you know about Google Cloud? And if he can make four in an hour, there's really no reason anyone can't build one pipeline in an afternoon. How do you build software for a diversity of customers? The conversation digs into how to keep Javascript fast, which is primarily focused on downloading the right bytes at the right time - when in doubt, delay! Recorded June 17th in the Fishbowl at the Norwegian Developer's Conference. Other names Scott sees Node as a key ingredient in getting people engaged in development again - simple, clear and with immediate feedback. While at NDC in London, Carl and Richard talked to Christine Yen about her experiences building instrumentation systems for applications both to diagnose problems and to understand how to make software better. Recently moved to Palo Alto, Brad talks about Google+, Google's social networking application for sharing thoughts, pictures and video. Aslam Khan tells us his thoughts on good software design, focusing on the domain, resisting prototypes and big design up front. Lots of discussion about building LOB apps in HTML 5 vs. native, as well as how Windows 8 and mobile applications expand the challenge. So what IoT device have you built? Ready to talk about Thorium again? More great thoughts from Julie! So off into the teaching practice, aimed at girls called Coding and Cupcakes and for women, an event called Coding and Cocktails. She has shown to deeply care for Axol in the Genesis Arc. This also impacts JavaScript libraries and opens the door for the on-going evolution of those libraries. Carl and Richard talk to Donald Farmer about Project Gemini, which brings Analysis Services to Excel in a very elegant way. You can't make microservices because they're fun, they have to solve a particular problem - and typically it's the problem of over-coupling within a group of services. He also digs into using F# with XAML to do UI related work. Pat Hynds talks to Carl and Richard during the .NET Rocks Live Weekend about how security still matters in the mature .NET 4.0 world. If you still don't get BizTalk, this is the show to listen to. This week we had some celebrity callers: Chris Sells and MSDN Regional Director Stephen Forte ring the show, making for some great tech talk. Click on the login button present in the upper right corner. Carl and Richard talk feed synchronization with Steven Lees from Microsoft about FeedSync, a Windows Live Dev service for synchronizing RSS and Atom feeds, and FeedSync feeds across the web. Carl and Richard talk to Nick Hodges about Delphi.NET. Let us know what you think! Heather talks about anticipatory design from the perspective of most people living with decision fatigue and being unwilling to make more decisions. What can observability do for you? with Glenn Block, Henrik Nielsen and Darrel Miller about Web API. Carl and Richard talk to Kevin Mack and Brandon Rohrer about the various tools that come together to help automate software releases. Carl and Richard talk to Ike Ellis about what it takes to get databases changes happening as smoothly as application changes. Carl and Richard talk to Stephen Toub about how the beta of Studio 11 has impacted parallelism.
Christian talks about how PWAs really are progressive - you can add bits of these new capabilities to your existing web sites and see some benefit. In this episode, Rocky talks about CSLA.NET and the changes for VS2005. It's worth taking some time to figure out how security is going to be part of your app from the beginning. But perhaps in the future HyperDev will be that place! The project is open source and looking for contributors - bring your humor and learn what the Bot Framework can do! The goal of OpenSilver is to let you migrate those applications. While at NDC in London, Carl and Richard talk to Stephanie Locke about her experiences deploying database in containers. Brian Randell and Martin Woodward talk about Team Foundation Server 2008, and all the goodness within. Tim talks about using different data stores within CluedIn to leverage their strengths - the graph storage of neo4J maintains relationships between documents where ElasticSearch actually finds things. The conversation starts out with Jeff describing ClearMeasure, his new organization focused on end-to-end services for his customers - Jeff considers his organization an outsourced IT department, handling development and operations. Troy also digs into the importance of transport layer security, typically using SSL. The discussion calls back to the issues around AngularJS, that its flexibility led to a huge array of programming approaches, making it difficult to manage projects in the long term. Are you ready for ECMAScript 6? spinoff primarily for .NET developers but focused on Tablet development (WinRT/Metro, iOS and Android). * where he's speaking this quarter.
And then there's Core 3 - what will it mean to have WPF and WinForms? Another year goes by, time for an identity update! He also talks about getting the infrastructure right at the beginning so that it's an asset to building software, not a liability. Carl and Richard talk to Robert Levy and Doug Kramer at the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles right after they unveiled the Microsoft Surface to the Microsoft developer community. Then to the Summer Hackfest, where the Foundation is providing support to get developers working on open source projects - if you've got one in mind, check out the links below and make a submission! Ryan talks about how DocumentDB provides a fast, scalable place to store objects and write your queries any way you like. .NET Core 3 has shipped - what did we get? Michele starts the conversation with the state of the union on identity. Collaboration is key - how do you add it to your applications? Do you fear the CSS? How secure is your software? Carl and Mark talk with Mark Anders about ASP.NET, Framework v1.1, Languages, IIS 6.0, and other great topics. Carl and Richard talk to Dan Wahlin about his current explorations into building web applications. Mads loves his role, and C# is better for it! Carl and Richard talk to Laurent Bugnion about his work around building virtual reality software. Roman Rubin and Venkatesh (Venky) Ramakrishnan talk about their experiences architecting and building large-scale Silverlight applications. World-renowned author and trainer Paul Sheriff talks with Carl and Richard about all things architecture: what, why, when, where, and how. Carl and Richard talk to Shawn Wildermuth about his experiences with vueJS. Mark has some other open source projects involving audio including a Skype voice changer and MP3 decoder in managed code. Despite her inherent laziness and childish demeanor, Melony is one of the most powerful characters in the SMG4 series, being the most powerful female character and has the power to rival Zero, the most powerful antagonist in the series. Lots of great stuff! The conversation digs into the history of Glimpse, its support by the community and Red Gate, and how it has progressed to live as an open source project with Microsoft. Boris talks about what it takes to make nKinect work and the new features that are coming, while Carl and Richard geek out on the possibilities. While at the Update Conference in Prague, Carl and Richard chatted with Jared Rhodes about his work building Internet of Things solutions with a variety of hardware and software. Carl and Richard talk to Joel Semeniuk about the state of Team Foundation Server (TFS) today. This leads to a conversation about automating UI testing, testing against local devices and only going to the cloud when you're ready to test on a larger diversity of phones. Artificial Intelligence is happening - are we using it correctly? Jakub talks about the portal framework being built on TypeScript and Knockout so that all the different Microsoft teams building Azure products don't get delayed in delivery because they can't get on the portal. Carl and Richard sit down with Scott Bellware at Oredev in Malmo, Sweden. Cory talks about his own experiences getting into the groove with the React stack, but that is certainly not the only way to build a web application. This is the first real show we've done on Web Controls, and it has been a long time coming. Rocky talks about the latest version with support for Blazor, along with many other popular UI solutions including Web Forms, WPF even Silverlight. Peer-to-Peer is more than BitTorrent! Since then, Billy has taught VB.NET classes and done consulting for major companies, as well as authoring (or co-authoring) at least 8 books on .NET. Black Mesa (formerly)The Military (formerly)NASA (formerly)PlayStation (formerly)RMKP While at NDC in London, Carl and Richard talked to Simona Cotin about Azure Functions. And it turns out you can write tests for multiple languages if you're careful. It's people like Dave that make Microsoft the leader in software innovation. What does the perfect developer education look like? James talks about the kinds of apps he's been building using the tools, how he organizes his projects for cross-platform development, what's in his toolbox and what he's adding to the community-at-large to help developers be successful. What does it take to successfully implement test automation on your application? The conversation starts out with a comment about folks coming to mobile development for the first time: Less rocket science, more building data-over-forms apps for internal use. Carl and Richard talk to Chris Love about his work building mobile apps - in two styles! To get startup dynamics, you need to look beyond just Microsoft tools - Alec's team uses tools like Chef, which comes from the Linux world. Lots of links in the show notes for tools and opinion pieces, take a look! 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. What's new in Node development? Are you a social developer? But now it also supports deployment as a web app, and as a Windows app, and soon, MacOS and Linux. Carl and Richard talk to Brad Abrams about Silverlight +Next and WPF. There's always a productivity hit with changing up tooling and process, with substantial benefits coming further down the path. He also talked about his new 1000-page book, Programming Microsoft ASP.NET. This is our first normal show since we've been back from our travels, and we have a few things to talk about ourselves. While at the Azure Tour stop in Tel Aviv, Carl and Richard sat down with Tamir Dresher to talk about Rx in the real world. As well, the conversation touched on the next versions of the framework and VS.NET. Russ Fustino is back in the limelight with a new TV show "It's All About The Tools" He talks about his experiences on the road, as one of the busiest evangelists at Microsoft. Burke talks a bit about the history of KendoUI and how it has evolved over the years, including a KendoUI Mobile (which is also open source). The conversation covers the latest version of the Kinect SDK (with grip! Carl and Richard talk to Geoff Smith and Howard van Rooijen about S#arp architecture. How do you take advantage of the costs of computing? But not all shortcuts are created equal - the discussion focuses first on navigation shortcuts to move around your code more efficiently, and then into block editing and moving. Carl and Richard talk to Arun Kishan about all things Windows. There are tools to help you understand what those impairments are like and to help you test how your app will work for everyone. And then there's also the Azure backend! There are digital cameras everywhere today, shouldn't we be building apps to take advantage of them? Carl and Richard talk to Francesco Balena about migrating VB6 applications to .NET. Finally, Ade Miller digs into how parallel development is becoming a focus at Microsoft. At this point the system is relatively small, but it's easy to move off onto your own platform once you get your idea to a place where it needs to grow. Kamran talks about his experiences implementing Raven in different projects all the way back to version 2 - and how much he appreciates that this latest version offers a ton more features and the kind of stability you need in a data storage tool. Jon talks about getting his teams to continuous deployment, rather than continuous delivery, so that there is a human interceding before software is deployed to the customer. Bill Wagner is back to talk about C# with topics from his best-selling book, Effective C#. While there are many cryptocurrencies, the boys focus on Bitcoin since it's the big kahuna. Jeremy talks about the great work going on the Silverlight today and how it still is the most efficient way to build applications that run on both Windows and OSX. The conversation dives into the various challenges around testing for web apps, trying to get beyond unit testing and into more functional testing that will let you know if you broke the UI. This is the non-subdued version of Glenn Block we all know and love! Carl Bot is an advanced Discord bot that lets you create reaction roles, store chats, and manage server logs. Adam as one of the originators of the project talks about his key focus - the architecture that allows you to build for both platforms from one code base, and a rapid code-compile-deploy-edit cycle called hot-reload that makes iterating on your mobile app development fun! went on the road to VS.NET Connections, an awesome .NET developer conference in Orlando, FL that took place October 27-30, 2002. "The holding will call into question many other regulations that protect consumers with respect to credit cards, bank accounts, mortgage loans, debt collection, credit reports, and identity theft," tweeted Chris Peterson, a former enforcement attorney at the CFPB who is now a law Shawn Wildermuth talks about the importance and significance of declarative User Interfaces in the context of WPF and Silverlight. This inevitably leads to the hardest debate: Is your organization okay with data in the cloud? The conversation also calls back to the Agile Manifesto and its abuse - it's not code with no documentation, its code over documentation! As usual with Dan, he also compares and contrasts various web stacks - lots of great links in the show notes too! Carl and Richard talks to Troy Hunt about all the ways you can get your accounts stolen. Also on Hobo Bros, Luke and Kevin explained that Human Melony was supposed to be in SMG4: War of the Simps in the Waifu Maker Room, where Melony was to fall in the Cauldron that made the Melony we all know today, but it was too late because the model was still in the works. What's up with Entity Framework? Mads talks about the process of deciding what is in and what will be pushed out for the next version of C#. Tatham talks about how Azure can't scale down far enough, that technologies like AppHarbor are filling in the bottom end of the cloud story. Egil talks about building bUnit to allow for robust testing, that is, tolerant to the normal changes that come to an application without breaking all the tests. Marcel also talks about feature toggling, giving operations the ability to turn features off and on to understand how they behave and improve software quality in the process. Carl and Richard talk to Rocky Lhotka about his impressions around the various announcements at Build. Carl and Richard talk to Ben Hall about his latest creation, KataCoda. The conversation starts out with a response to a listener about debugging services in Azure - the challenge of following an execution path through your software and the various service offerings of Azure that your application might depend on to understand where problems lie. The conversation ranges over a variety of web development technologies, including Web Forms, Angular, and more. Jay is one of the leaders of LightSwitch at Microsoft and talks about some of the new features coming in LightSwitch including HTML 5 clients. From the huge displays on desktop PCs to the tiny screens of smartphones, you can make your web pages work effectively! And it works with ASP.NET Core! The conversation digs into how microservices have evolved, the role of containers, and how the different tools that go together to make a successful microservices architecture. This week, Carl and Mark talk to Juval Lowy about, among other things, the new version of C# (2.0). Carl and Richard talk to Daniel Piessens about his experiences using various features of Azure to secure applications. Carl and Richard talk to Clemens Vasters about his work on the service bus. Maybe! The bulk of the work for using machine learning is focused on sources, quality and bias in data.
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