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Here is my usual post-conference post with updated code samples related to the topics I presented on. I did 2 full day tutorials, and 4 sessions...enjoy! Many of the demos come from my book, Learning WCF. Since there is setup required for most of the samples that illustrate security or rely on a database, it is best you download the entire package of samples and follow the setup instructions provided in the appendix. Here's the link: http://www.thatindigogirl.com/LearningWCFCode.aspx TUTORIAL: Improve Your SOA: Designing a Secure, Reliable and Scalable System with WCF Samples from my book (see above) illustrate exception handling, MTOM, streaming, MSMQ, pub-sub, transactions, security for intranet/Internet/mutual certificate/claims-based/federated, multithreading, and throttling Get my latest routing samples here: http://www.dasblonde.net/downloads/Routers.zip Additional error handler code here: http://www.dasblonde.net/downloads/ErrorHandlers.zip I have additional samples related to proxies here, including a proxy wrapper to address timeouts and uncaught exceptions that fault the channel: http://www.dasblonde.net/downloads/Proxies.zip The chunking channel is in the SDK extensibility samples. TUTORIAL: .NET Roadmap The following link has instructions for machine setup used for the demos, and numerous references to resources, and code samples demonstrated: http://www.dasblonde.net/downloads/TechnologyRoadmap0308.zip SESSION: ADFS and ASP.NET: Supporting Single Sign-On in your Web Applications The code I demonstrated in this session is based on the Tech Net tutorial for setting up VPCs for WIndows Server 2008 and ADFS.here: http://technet2.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/library/87e1a178-4d8a-4e89-98b0-d125f9c84c221033.mspx?mfr=true As it is published today, the lab has just a few issues that can get in the way of your success with the setup. The following blog post summarizes those issues if you have comments, but I also have a PDF that has a few screenshots here: http://www.dasblonde.net/downloads/ADFSServer2008LabErrata.pdf SESSION: Building a Router for your Applications I wrote two MSDN articles on this subject, the first is already published here: http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc500646.aspx Get the routing samples for both parts here: http://www.dasblonde.net/downloads/Routers.zip The second part should be up within another month. SESSION: Going Federated with WCF Most of the samples for this session come from my book code (see above). An Read More...
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In a post on January 25th , I said, "I posted yesterday that we had shipped our Enterprise Collateral Management solution based on our new architecture. As I said, we still have a lot more to do ." I provided a concise list of the methodologies, technologies and tools that we used in our 14 month cycle. To update where we are now, it will be necessary for me to give a little more context. First, when I mention "our company", we are actually a Division exclusively devoted to Collateral Management. This division, in turn is part of a much larger worldwide company that has at least 6 more financial sector products dealing with other aspects of managing risk. That company then, in turn is part of a huge Ratings company. The rest of the products are (mostly) integrated into one suite that we sell. Ours is not. One reason is that the various products have been organized into self-contained product groups. That means that we had our own development, marketing, sales, product and management for just Collateral Management. Five or six weeks ago, our company went through a rather large reorganization that aligned things by a global R&D, global Marketing, etc. I think this is an extremely good thing. Our product is now "owned" by R&D which also owns all the other products that are part of the suite and otherwise and we are detached from product so we can focus on development. We can also look at integrating into the suite and bi-directional learning. One consequence of this is now instead of my boss reporting to a VP of Collateral Management, he reports to a Senior Director in R&D who owns a product out of our large offices in Manhattan. The cool thing is that Josh Madden is a 20 year+ veteran developer/architect like me who has done great things in the Financial area for companies like Reuters. He gets development. The other cool thing is that his other product group also uses a lot of Agile techniques and greatly appreciates our total XP environment. One more thing: Read More...
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A N&N from Brussels Belgium where I am up in the middle of the night (again I wake up at 3AM!) with my sleep hours all screwed up. I am enjoying my week here nonetheless. I don't know quite what to make of Brussels. Some parts remind me quite a bit of Paris but there is this weird mix of "modern" glass buildings although the style is a bit "older" than such US buildings. I don't know, I'm jet lagged and probably making no sense. The (potential) customer we are visiting is actually quite large > 3,000 employees most in one large building and I have been working hard on a "High Level Technical Document." Its' certainly some BDUF but this is a large SaS type architecture across 3 data centers that has many Enterprise issues (levels of Failover, SLAs, SQL Server Hot Mirroring, Perimeter Zone Security, etc. to deal with and get right. Anyhow, the food is good and there is a lot of espresso-). Architecture The Open Group (the TOGAF guys) has scheduled what appears to be an interesting conference on Enterprise Architecture and SOA in San Diego [via Architecture Blog ] Avalon/WCF Karsten gives an update on the North Face In Store Explorer WCF application that floored many of us at PDC05 and has now been deployed . He also reminds, "Note that the white paper written about this application is still relevant and worth reading. The code samples all work just fine on the final bits and have some useful code as far as state management, image montages and a 3D carousel." My good friend and fellow Smart Client track speaker, Walt Ritscher has started a new WCF blog at http://wpfwonderland.wordpress.com - Subscribed! Check out XAML to IL Explained Part 1 , WPF/e Example - Game of Life WCF/Indigo/SOA Nicholas Allan has his best of 2006 (and what a year it was for him/them!). Also check out Zen Faults Other Ted Neward has his predictions for 2007 , of which I mostly agree with all of them but one of the best qualities of Ted Read More...
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You know what? Owning a pool really sucks-). Oh, it’s great to go in but not a lot of fun spending most of every Saturday going to the pool shop getting the water levels measured, spending $100 a week on chemicals, spending the rest of the day applying such chemicals, and endless vacuuming. Plus I have no F*&^^ idea what I’m doing-). Anyone sympathize? I have a whole bunch of stuff saved up since I couldn’t blog because even with 8 of us busting our humps we totally blew this Iteration (more later) and we’re all working in pieces this weekend (Yes, even on an Agile team!). It was a really awesome week for Ruby, especially in CLR land: Ruby/Rails Great news from John Gough (author of still the best CLR compiler book 4 years later) and crew at Queensland, with the preliminary Beta release of the Gardens Point Ruby.Net compiler download !! John, has some more in-depth analysis here . If you haven’t tried Ruby you owe to yourself to do so as it just may arguably be the most powerful yet simple language out there. Equally awesome news from my pal John Lam , who has released RubyCLR Drop 4. I plan to play with both of these as soon as we ship this Iteration-)). Day 1 report f rom the RailsConf 2006 Day 1 and Day 2 Report . Another Day 1 Report from Robby on Rails. Also Day 2 Part 1 CLR FxCop 1.35 release announced on FxCop blog . Shawn has a great post on Reducing Startup Time Due to Strong Name Verification WPF/Avalon The WPF blog shows how to Implement a Mac OS X Dock in WPF . Also check-out the Slinky XAML ListBox !! On the LearningWPF blog, there is a sample using a re-usable WPF Template for displaying time information WCF/Indigo/SOA/WSE Nicholas announces the availability of slides from the TechEd WCF chalk talks from the community site Kiril talks about a subject very dear to me; controlling aspects of WSDL Generation from WCF. He states that there are three main phases: 1) Design time: settings on data contract, message contract, service contract, service behavior, Read More...
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