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 Monday, July 05, 2010

logo-ProjectServ2010

This is great news: Microsoft have released a Hyper-V machine that contains integration between Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 and Project Server 2010. Both products are great releases and it is even better to see them working together.

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?displaylang=en&FamilyID=f221c660-161b-43ca-95f3-e0e4aad8d43e

This image will expire Dec 30th, 2010. This VHD release is available in English only.
This community technical preview of Team Foundation Server 2010 and Project Server 2010 Integration allows teams to share data between the two servers. This virtual machine includes enterprise project plans in Project Server mapped to team projects in Team Foundation Server, along with sample data to highlight key integration scenarios. The walkthrough documents provide four scenarios that simulate the interactions between the project manager, working in Project Server, and the software development team, working in Team Foundation Server.
The value of Project Server and Team Foundation Server integration is to provide up-to-date project status and resource availability across agile and formal teams; help project managers track high-level requirements and allow the team lead to manage the details; and permit project managers to live in Project Server and manage projects across the enterprise while development team leads live in Team Foundation Server and manage their software development project. With this tool, the Project Management Office (PMO) is able to plan, collaborate and track real-time progress made by formal or agile teams.
This virtual machine is running Windows Server 2008 Enterprise Edition R2. It contains a full installation of Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010, Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate, Project Server 2010, with Office 2010 and all necessary prerequisites.

 scrn-project_server2_box-home

Monday, July 05, 2010 1:48:21 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Team Foundation Server | TFS
 Friday, June 11, 2010

Lately I have been reading and working on performance and security. It reminded me of the value of Visual Studio and Fiddler and their extensions.

Fiddler Logo

As you may know I love the work the Patterns & Practices do, such as the Application Architecture guide. Next to the apparch guide, J.D. Meier and the others have created and gathered great info on performance and security. The content may contain some aged pages, but don’t let that put you off: concepts and principles of performance and security, or any other non-functional area, remain current and applicable. Still it is good to know that Windows Azure gets its own security guidance.

While I am promoting J.D.’s work, why not take a look at his recent Getting Results material. It is a great source of inspiration for me and points out clearly what to do more and what to do less. And it is very easy to start performance tuning yourself too…

Friday, June 11, 2010 7:31:37 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Development | Visual Studio
 Monday, May 17, 2010

The Visual Studio product teams have a very open culture, which we learned once more during the MVP week in February. Well the product teams are surrounded by MVPs and Inner Circle partners who also share their knowledge and expertise under the Rangers-flag. The Rangers provide real-world guidance for common questions and requests. These are their latest projects:

Visual Studio 2010 Quick Reference Guidance 

Getting started with Team Foundation Server 2010 (contains things like capacity planning)

 

VS2010 Capacity

 

TFS Integration Platform

How to integrate other systems with TFS 2010

 

TFS Virtualization Guidance

How to virtualize TFS 2010

 

Requirements Management

How to do requirements management in TFS 2010

 

TFS Upgrade Guide

How to upgrade from older versions to TFS2010

 

TFS Branching Guide 2010

How to do merging and branching in TFS 2010 version control

 

Performance Testing Quick Reference Guide

How to do performance tests using TFS 2010

Source: http://blogs.msdn.com/willy-peter_schaub/

Monday, May 17, 2010 2:54:44 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Team Foundation Server | TFS
 Saturday, April 24, 2010

Enterprise Library 5.0 Final Release - Get it Now!

From the CHM: “Enterprise Library consists of a collection of application blocks and core infrastructure. All of these are reusable software components designed to assist developers with common enterprise development challenges.

Enterprise Library also provides many highly configurable features that make it much easier to manage repetitive tasks, known as crosscutting concerns, which occur in many places in your applications. These include tasks such as logging, validation, caching, exception management, and more. In addition, the dependency injection container it provides can help to simplify and decouple your designs, make them more testable and understandable, and help you to produce more efficient designs and implementations of all kinds of applications.

 

This diagram shows the blocks and their dependencies:

image

 

A first look at the new config tool:

image

 

For more info: http://blogs.msdn.com/agile/archive/2010/04/20/microsoft-enterprise-library-5-0-released.aspx

Saturday, April 24, 2010 4:38:16 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Development
 Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Today is a big day for the Dutch developer community: we are launching Visual Studio 2010! Visual Studio is so much more than a developer tool today: you can create UML diagrams, visually analyze your source code, plan agile projects and iterations and reproduce complex bugs. All of this works in an enterprise environment where multiple development teams and many users share the same platform. Installation has been simplified and administration too. However, the biggest investments have gone to test and lab capabilities: the testing features are great so now your manual and functional testers get great tools too. Lab management expands the testing features in a sense that you can create virtual machines as clients for your applications and you can create snapshots of bugs and test runs, which developers can simply resume and take over for debugging.

 

 

Tuesday, April 20, 2010 10:37:29 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Team Foundation Server | TFS | Visual Studio | VSTS
 Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Recently Ewald Hofman and I presented two sessions at the Microsoft Application Platform Conference. Gerard van der Pol envisaged an ALM Showcase track in which all phases of a development project would be presented. 

image

Yesterday and today we repeated this concept in a slightly different form. Together with Marcel, Edward, Hassan, Clemens, Rob, Rene and Gerard we had a lot of fun doing the interactive sessions.

11:10 - Planning the Showcase Application

13:30 - Modeling the Showcase Application

15:05 - Developing the Showcase Application

16:30 - Building the Showcase Application

09:15 - Planning, Design and Developing the Showcase Application (Recap Day 1)

10:50 - Using Version Control

13:15 - Selecting an Optimal Branch and Merge Strategy

14:50 - Performance testing

16:15 - Testing the Showcase Application

 

The most important part was to co-present the sessions: so there is a presenter and a code monkey who does the demos and presents where necessary. I think this made the sessions more attractive to the audience since there was continuous presenting and demos. Hopefully the audience enjoyed it too.

 

And it was an honor to share an agenda and speakers room with Anders Hejlsberg and Scott Hanselman!

 

image

Wednesday, March 31, 2010 3:13:54 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
ALM | Visual Studio | VSTS
 Monday, March 15, 2010

Cameron Skinner blogged about this cool new vsix: It combines the reference architectures from Microsoft Patterns & Practices Application Architecture Guide with the new layered diagram features in Visual Studio 2010.

LayeredDiagramEx

Just download the vsix from here and open it to install it to your Visual Studio 2010 RC. Then create a layered diagram in a new or existing solution, open the toolbox and there you have five new templates:

  • Mobile Application
  • Rich Client Application
  • Rich Internet Application
  • Services Application
  • Web Application

which you can just drag and drop to the design surface to create a fully AppArch compliant solution from scratch. In the above screenshot you can see the Rich Internet Application template, that I used. How cool is that. I expect a lot more extensions to the diagrams in the months to come.

Monday, March 15, 2010 8:13:30 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Software Factories | Visual Studio | VSTS
 Friday, March 05, 2010

Windows is in.

SQL Server is in.

Exchange is in.

SharePoint is in.

Office is in.

Dynamics CRM is in.

were_all_in_home

Today I saw a Microsoft website I hadn’t seen before on cloud computing. It provides information for technical professionals, business professionals and government & education. It is a good change for the page I have visited frequently over the past year and a half but which I always found to be too technical. The We’re all in. site does a good job of making cloud tangible. Go Steve!

Friday, March 05, 2010 7:21:52 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

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Pieter de Bruin
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