Development Blog With Code Updates : Developercast.com

October 30, 2007

David Yack Talks Microsoft CRM!

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

David Yack introduces us to Microsoft CRM and related products, giving us the developer story.

October 25, 2007

Catching up with Brad Abrams

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Carl and Richard talk to Brad Abrams about Silverlight +Next and WPF.

October 23, 2007

Alex Daley on Windows Live Labs

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Carl and Richard talk to Alex Daley about some of the projects he’s working on at Windows Live Labs, a division of Microsoft Research that focuses on shipping new web technologies.

October 18, 2007

Rocky Lhotka and Anthony Handley on WPF

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Carl meets up with Rocky Lhotka and his associate, Anthony Handley, at ReMix in Boston to discuss the work they have done separating the roles of designer and developer using WPF.

October 16, 2007

Dino Esposito on AJAX Architecture

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Carl and Richard caught up with Dino Esposito at DevReach in Sofia, Bulgaria to talk about AJAX architecture.

October 11, 2007

WPF Panel Discussion

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Carl and Richard host a panel discussion on Windows Presentation Foundation at DevReach in Sofia Bulgaria. Panelists: Tim Huckaby, Brian Noyes, and Todd Anglin. Chad Hower made a cameo appearance as well.

October 9, 2007

Ken Getz on VSTO and Other Stuff ™

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Ken Getz checked in to talk about the latest in VSTO, and then the converstaion turned geeky.

October 4, 2007

Eli Lopian Discusses TypeMock.NET

Filed under: Development — @ 12:00 am

Carl and Richard talk to Eli Lopian about how mocking the right way can produce isolation in your test environment, allowing for more effective unit testing.

October 2, 2007

Venkat Subramanium on the Inevitibility of Dynamic Languages

Filed under: Development — @ 12:24 am

Venkat shares his passionate reasoning as to why dynamic languages (with good unit tests) are the way of the future.

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