Contents tagged with Architecture
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Efficient Workflow Architectures at Software 2010 in Oslo
Tomorrow I'm doing a session at the Software 2010 conference arranged by Den Norske Dataforening (DND) in Oslo.
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Some notes on ClickOnce
In my sessions on smart clients the past weeks the ClickOnce seems to be the topic that generates the most questions. I'll try to clarify some of the issues here.
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Please don't do Client/Server with Smart Client technology
I'm currently talking about Smart Clients around Norway and I've been focusing on the architectural aspects of Smart Client technology. Recently Clemens posted about much the same topic.
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Smart Client sessions at Microsoft Days
Yesterday I held three sessions at the quartely Microsoft Days (Microsoftdagene) event in Oslo. In three sessions we covered Smart Clients in the Service Oriented Architecture, todays technologystack, and the features of the upcoming technology stack from Microsoft with focus on VSTO 2005 and Windows Forms 2.0.
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Some changes on the new year
Entering the new year my colleague Anders inspired me to join the crowd of good samaritans. A task postponed far too long. Suffering from severe cruft I formatted my box and started out with clean sheets. This gave me the opportunity to start developing with least privelige and also installing Cassini for a lighter ASP.NET experience. I'm also finally starting up with VS.NET 2005 for real.
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Testing private methods - Shortcuts will cut you
Anders dissects the testing features of Team System, and seems quite pleased with what he finds.
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A crowded unit testing BoF
This mornings BoF lead by James Newkirk was truly crowded and goes to prove that .NET developers are taking testing seriously. Considering the level of participation in the discussions there might actually have been too many participants as there were no real discussions, more statements regarding to experience summed up and commented by James Newkirk.
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Using an XmlPublisher in the ExceptionManagement ApplicationBlock
I've been using the Microsoft ExceptionManagement ApplicationBlock and I spent some time creating a nice ExceptionXmlPublisher because the one described in the docs has some flaws. Using the xml publisher removes the need to run the EventLog installer to be able to create the eventlog. Having the exceptions in Xml also works nicely in a distributed environment, and with continous integration. I will soon create an XSLT stylesheet to integrate the current runtime exceptions into my CruiseControl.NET dashboard, so developers can monitor what's going on during execution on the development testserver.
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Delivering presentation over Web Services with WSRP
I recently was asked to talk about the possibilities of implementing a WSRP consumer on the .NET platform. And suprisingly, it has very little to do with Web Services Routing Protocol.
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Bridge to asynchronous water
Kevin W. Hammond points out that programming asynchronous webservices (using SOAP over MSMQ) creates a mindcandy for developers used to the RPC style of SOAP over HTTP: