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  • On the Road Again

    With apologies to Wille Nelson, I will be on the road again for INETA. Monday night will be a brand new area and talk for me on WF. With the increasing use of it in my architecture for the next phase at work, I have developed quite a love affair with WF. 12/11/06 Cedar Rapids INETA - Introduction to Windows Workflow (WF) NEW Talk!! Introduction to Windows Workflow Foundation - Presented By Sam Gentile Until recently, Windows developers who wished to use Workflow in their applications were forced to look at a variety of "big gun" solutions such as BizTalk Server and K2 among others. Windows Workflow (WF) is part of the recently released Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0. WF provides one common workflow foundation for all of Windows. In this talk, Sam will provide an introduction to Windows Workflow showing how the Runtime works in running Activities that you can create yourself. In addition, Sam will cover using the Graphical Designer to edit Workflows and how to host the Designer in your own applications. Sam Gentile is internationally known and recognized for his comprehensive expert Microsoft and .NET knowledge, and has been acknowledged by Microsoft as an Solutions Architect MVP. Sam is also an INETA Speaker, having delivered .NET training to user groups and companies all over the world. Sam is employed by a major international firm as an Agile Software Architect and Team Lead. His team utilizes full Agile practices as well as WinFX technologies like WCF, and .NET 3 to rapidly deliver business value. Sam Gentile's experience with .NET began in 1999 during the early pre-Beta 1 period. He participated in the .NET Early Adopter Program (EAP) while architecting and implementing a .NET N-Tier product for NaviSite in 2000. During his nearly six years of .NET experience, Gentile has architected, developed and delivered over ten major .NET-based products or systems, one of which, the Groove Toolkit for Visual Studio .NET, won a JOLT award. Location: Baymont Inn & Read More...
  • New and Notable 115

    There is so much I want to say about important topics like Rocky's well-written, thought provoking Semantic Coupling: The Elephant in the SOA Room and Udi Dahan's excellent response but I don't have time to write a good response but hopefully soon. SOA/Services/WCF/Indigo/Workflow As mentioned, Rocky's well-written Semantic Coupling: The Elephant in the SOA Room Udi Dahan's excellent response particularly, "I'd disagree that this is what SOA focuses on. I'd say that Web Services focuses on that. And SOA does not equal Web Services." Again, and again, people don't get this. My good friend Harry also creates a stir with Things I Didn't Realize about WF , More Stuff I Didn't Realize about WF provoking a response from Paul Andrews a lead on the WF. Harry did get some things wrong which he acknowledges with WF Clarifications and Corrections . We are also, as Harry dependent on the same two foundational technologies: WF and WCF so I also would like to see integration with WCF not ASMX but there is a lot of power in WF. Jorgen points to this Channel 9 chalk-talk video by Vittorio Bertocci on the innermost details of WS-Trust. Nicholas Allan, WCF's equivalent of the Energizer Bunny , has some more great posts: Use OnWay for Long-Running Operations , Configuring HTTP for Windows Vista , and TransportWithMessageCredential over TCP Software Architecture Peter Provost posts on the release of Guidance Explorer Beta 2 on CodePlex Brad Appleton has assembled a bunch of entries with numerous resources on different aspects of Scaling Agility, a topic very dear to me . Scott Hanselman reports on hosting the Open Source in the Enterprise at the Patterns & Practices Summit . Speaking of the above, I really loved Ted's post on the above with the quote, " But Java still has much more it can teach the .NET community: mocking, unit-testing, lightweight containers, dependency-injection, and the perils of O/R-M are just part of Read More...

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