ASP.NET Podcasts
After going on holidays, feeling relaxed and generally not doing much tech related stuff, I have fallen behind in a number of things. One was my inbox, something like 1400+ messages I have had to wade through, and they keep coming.
However, the other is the podcasts. Wally has been producing some podcasts and I have been out of the loop, and being the slacker that I am, have not listed them here on my blog. So without further ado, here's the recent list:
( As usual, Subscribe here )
ASP.NET Podcast Show #97 - Jim Wooley on Link Part III (video and audio)
Download WMV File, MP4 File (iPod and Zune), MP3 Audio File.
Show Notes:
In the past, working with data has required learning a
number of different API sets for each kind of data you
needed to access. Relational data requires ADO. XML uses
Xpath, XQuery and the XML Dom. Objects require you to write
your own manipulation code. In this video, Jim Wooley (MVP
in VB) continues to look at the Language Integrated Query
(LINQ) project and demonstrates how to leverage it to use a
single API to work against XML, objects and relational data.
In it, we continue exploring the ThinqLinq web site by
demonstrating creating and querying XML to create and
consume RSS feeds using ASP.Net with Visual Studio code name
"Orcas". The video concludes with an overview of the
language changes in C#3.0 and VB 9.0 which enable the
querying functionality.
This video is part 3 of 3. The
code samples and slides are available at
http://devauthority.com/files/13/jwooley/entry38500.aspx. Jim can be contacted via his web site at
http://devauthority.com/blogs/jwooley
or at the site for his upcoming LINQ book at
http://LinqInAction.net.
ASP.NET Podcast Show #96 - Jim Wooley on Link Part II (video and audio)
Direct Download format: WMV File, Ipod/Zune, MP3 audio File
Show Notes:
In the past, working with data has required learning a
number of different API sets for each kind of data you
needed to access. Relational data requires ADO. XML uses
Xpath, XQuery and the XML Dom. Objects require you to write
your own manipulation code. In this video, Jim Wooley (MVP
in VB) continues to look at the Language Integrated Query
(LINQ) project and demonstrates how to leverage it to use a
single API to work against objects or relational data. In
it, we continue exploring the ThinqLinq
<http://aspnetpodcast.com/CS11/blogs/asp.net_podcast/archive/2007/07/09/asp-net-podcast-show-96-jim-wooley-on-link-part-ii-video-and-audio.aspx> web site by demonstrating joining in-memory object
structures from System.IO with relational data from SQL
Server. We also look at updating data back to the database
using ASP.Net with Visual Studio code name "Orcas".
This video is part 2 of 3. The code samples and slides
are available at
http://devauthority.com/files/13/jwooley/entry38500.aspx. Jim can be contacted via his web site at
http://devauthority.com/blogs/jwooley
or at the site for his upcoming LINQ book at
http://LinqInAction.net
ASP.NET Podcast Show #95 - Jim Wooley on LINQ Part I (video and audio)
Download WMV video, iPod video, MP3 audio.
Show Notes:
Part 1:
In the past, working with data has required
learning a number of different API sets for each kind of
data you needed to access. Relational data requires ADO. XML
uses Xpath, XQuery and the XML Dom. Objects require you to
write your own manipulation code. In this video, Jim Wooley
(MVP in VB) introduces the Language Integrated Query (LINQ)
project and demonstrates how to leverage it to use a single
API to work against objects or relational data. In it, we
explore extending an existing web site to add the ability to
load a set of web links from a database and display them
using ASP.Net with Visual Studio code name "Orcas". He
starts with a standard object collection populated by a
DataReader and demonstrates how to eliminate the
plumbing
code using LINQ and LINQ to SQL.
Originally recorded on 3/21. Link to the Beta 1 download
page:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/vstudio/aa700831.aspx
This video is part 1 of 3 recorded at the Atlanta
Visual Basic Study Group (www.avbsg.net). If it stops
abruptly, it is because we didn't realize pressing F10 to
step through code in a VPC would cause our recording tool to
stop. The code samples and slides are available at
http://devauthority.com/files/13/jwooley/entry38500.aspx. Jim can be contacted via his web site at
http://devauthority.com/blogs/jwooley or at the site for his upcoming LINQ book at
http://LinqInAction.net.