Drilling into VSTS 2010 Testing

With the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference (PDC) around the corner, I half expected things to get pretty quiet ahead of the show. So imagine our surprise when the Redmondians began peppering us with new information about upcoming dev-related products like Visual Studio 2010, .NET Framework 4.0, the "Dublin" app server and the "Oslo" modeling and repository initiative.

Updates to Visual Studio Team System (VSTS) took center stage in a recent blog post by Microsoft Developer Division Senior Vice President S. "Soma" Somasegar. He said the next version of Microsoft's VSTS will allow developers to more easily test for and isolate bugs.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 10/07/20080 comments


jQuery Surprise

Give Microsoft this: The company knows how to fill a news cycle. Over the past week, we've seen new information released about .NET Framework 4.0, Visual Studio 2010 and the new Dublin app server technologies . All of this, of course, just a few weeks ahead of the dev-apalooza that will be PDC 2008. More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 10/02/20080 comments


Visual Studio 2010 and .NET 4.0: Winning the Name Game

If no news is good news, then the news we got from Microsoft last week was very good news indeed. Microsoft, you see, has released the official names of the upcoming versions of .NET Framework and Visual Studio.

Don't get me wrong, sometimes a name can be news. Like when Microsoft revealed to us that the name for WPF/E would be "Silverlight." Or when we all learned that two of Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin's children are named Trig and Track. That last example, I suppose, provides some comfort as we learn that Microsoft is working to launch Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4.0.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/30/20082 comments


Friends in High Places

If you've been reading Redmond Developer News the past couple years, you may recall seeing the name Andrew Brust in our pages from time to time. As chief of New Technology at consulting firm twentysix New York, vice chairman of the New York Software Industry Association and a Microsoft Regional Director (RD), Brust is a leading light in .NET development.

He also happens to be an active contributor to our VSLive! family of developer conferences, serving as conference chair of the VSLive! New York show earlier this month. It's no surprise, given the breadth of his technical acumen, that our editors often turn to Brust to help us place the events of the day into context for our audience of Microsoft- and .NET-aligned development managers.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/25/20081 comments


Brendan Eich: Browsers Sharpening JavaScript Performance

In the course of writing an upcoming cover feature on Google Chrome and its impact on Google's Web platform aspirations, I had a 30-minute talk with Brendan Eich. In addition to being the chief technical officer of Mozilla Corp., the commercial entity behind Firefox development, Eich also happens to be the creator of the JavaScript programming language.

JavaScript, of course, is central to AJAX-based development and to Google's Web strategy. Eich said that developers shouldn't be too quick to abandon JavaScript development for proprietary rich Internet application (RIA) frameworks like Silverlight and Adobe Flex.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/23/20084 comments


Managing the Meltdown

It's taken nine months, but the brewing financial calamity sparked by the meltdown of subprime real estate loans is finally getting the full attention it deserves from the media and public. With the Dow losing ground in chunks and long-standing financial institutions teetering on the edge of -- or falling into -- outright insolvency, it's clear that we're facing a major economic crisis.

Of course, our readers have been here before. In 2000, when the dot-com bubble burst and put an abrupt end to the hyper-optimistic chicanery that gave birth to companies like Pets.com and Flooz.com, the developer and IT communities were particularly hard-hit. We, after all, stood at ground zero of the event. Tech spending crashed. Vibrant Web startups shuttered. And major telecom players like Lucent and WorldCom shed thousands of jobs.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/18/20080 comments


Google Chrome: Firefox Killer?

It's hardly surprising that Google's new Chrome browser would shake up the browser market and incite all sorts of hand-wringing and speculation about the impact Chrome might have on Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE) browser. After all, Google's browser enjoys a level of immediate brand awareness and mindshare that the Mozilla Foundation, despite four years of hard labor on Firefox, must truly envy.

The funny thing is, Google's Chrome browser, at least in the short-term, is likely to impact IE the least of all the browser alternatives on the market. Peter O'Kelly, principal analyst for O'Kelly Consulting, said large swaths of Microsoft's market share, especially within organizations, are protected by the need for the browser to be compatible with existing business apps. And many of those were tuned specifically for IE.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/16/20082 comments


VSLive! NY: That's a Wrap

RDN editors Jeffrey Schwartz and Kathleen Richards were in New York City for the VSLive! New York conference this week and came away impressed with the amount of activity and forward-looking presentations at the 15-year-old confab.

In fact, VSLive! seemed to officially kick off the run-up to Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference (PDC), slated for the last week of October. For instance, VSLive! featured a number of presentations germane to Microsoft's Oslo software modeling and enterprise repository project. Oslo is widely expected to play center stage at PDC next month. You can read more about Oslo and Microsoft's modeling efforts here.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/11/20080 comments


.NET Developers Give Chrome a Peek

As some of you may know, the VSLive! New York conference is taking place this week in Manhattan. This long-running confab has been helping Visual Studio programmers and .NET development managers grapple with technical challenges for years. RDN Executive Editor Jeffrey Schwartz is at the event and offers his insight:

While Microsoft has had little to say about Google jumping into the browser market, .NET developers certainly have shown interest.

More

Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on 09/09/20082 comments


Gnoshing on Chrome

When Google surprised folks by releasing its Chrome browser this week, it caused quite a stir. A lot of the excitement, of course, stems from the unique competitive challenge Google poses to Microsoft.

Make no mistake: Mozilla and Apple have done great things with Firefox and Safari -- literally motivating Redmond to reanimate an IE dev team that had been frozen in carbonite since IE 6 shipped. But those organizations aren't a serious threat to unseat Windows as a dominant platform.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/04/20083 comments


Google Shines Up Chrome

Google today announced the beta release of its open source Chrome Web browser . Based on the WebKit rendering engine and featuring the new V8 JavaScript engine for accelerating the performance of JavaScript code, Chrome could quickly challenge Internet Explorer and Firefox as a leading Web browser.

As RDN Executive Editor Jeffrey Schwartz reports, industry analysts believe Google's Chrome will have an impact that extends far beyond the browser market. In an interview, IDC Program Director Al Hilwa described Chrome as "Google's platform play."

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 09/02/200810 comments


Embarcadero Advances Borland Tools

If you read RDN , you know we've closely followed the fate of the once-legendary Borland Developer Tools Group (DTG). The group that gave us the modern integrated development environment (IDE) and the Delphi programming language had spent a couple of years in limbo as Borland re-invented itself as an application lifecycle management (ALM) solutions vendor.

First the dev tools unit was publicly put on the block, but Borland got no serious takers. Then in November 2006, Borland spun off DTG as a wholly owned subsidiary called CodeGear. The unit continued to advance its products and tools, but was pinched by the increasingly broad managed tools push from Microsoft and the growth in Web-based development.

More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 08/28/200811 comments


Subscribe on YouTube