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1 Articles match "Article","Visual Studio"
| Related DevelopMentor Courses | MORE | | I Use This even use Visual Studio. The Kindle can sync my current location in a book to every device, but I have to move papers and articles over manually. At usesthis.com they interview a bunch of people to ask about their current computer setup and their dream setup. Most of them are using aged machines, ultraportables (Mac Air is popular), and Emacs/VIM for editing (a few slickedit fans). Most of them have little to add in their dream setup (more battery life, better cloud sync). Are our tools finally good enough? Not for me. Current setup: A 4 year old Sony Z laptop, 8GB RAM, SSD. DevelopMentor Courses - Friday, October 26, 2012 |
42 Articles match "Article","Visual Studio"
| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | Announcing LearningLine: Instructor-led online training from DevelopMentor This is why LearningLine uses multiple learning modalities including videos, articles, code demos, and exercises. Filed under: DevelopMentor Tagged: NET , ASP.NET , DevelopMentor , MSDN , Open Source , Screencasts , Speaking , tips , Tools , Visual Studio. DevelopMentor.NET ASP.NET MSDN Open Source Screencasts Speaking tips Tools Visual StudioI am very proud to announce an exciting new online learning platform from DevelopMentor : [link]. At DevelopMentor we have been thinking deeply about online training. You can get more details at [link]. Google+. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Monday, February 18, 2013 Create new ASP.NET MVC views the easy way So here is an article to help the new comers make it across step 2 more easily as well as help the advanced MVC developers be more productive. Luckily in the case of views, Visual Studio has the tooling built in to make this brain-dead. Now the wizard that comes up has the name of the view auto-filled by Visual Studio. Visual Studio and Resharper handle it all for you. Filed under: Articles Tagged: NET , MVC , Resharper , tips , Visual Studio. Articles.NET MVC Resharper tips Visual StudioCheers, @mkennedy. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Saturday, December 1, 2012 I Use This even use Visual Studio. The Kindle can sync my current location in a book to every device, but I have to move papers and articles over manually. At usesthis.com they interview a bunch of people to ask about their current computer setup and their dream setup. Most of them are using aged machines, ultraportables (Mac Air is popular), and Emacs/VIM for editing (a few slickedit fans). Most of them have little to add in their dream setup (more battery life, better cloud sync). Are our tools finally good enough? Not for me. Current setup: A 4 year old Sony Z laptop, 8GB RAM, SSD. DevelopMentor Courses - Friday, October 26, 2012 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - MongoDB vs. SQL Server 2008 Performance Showdown
This article is a follow up one I wrote last week entitled “The NoSQL Movement, LINQ, and MongoDB – Oh My!”. In that article I introduced the NoSQL movement, MongoDB, and showed you how to program against it in.NET … Continue reading → NoSQL Articles Visual Studio Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Thursday, April 29, 2010 - Build a Multi-Project Visual Studio Template
Download the code for this article here. To enhance developer productivity, the toolkit combines a set of helper classes with code and xml snippets, as well as Visual Studio item and project templates. After installing the toolkit, all a developer needs to do to get started is open Visual Studio and create a new project by selecting one the project templates that appear under the Mvvm category. Visual Studio makes it extremely easy to create a single-project template. You can download the code for this article here. saferootprojectname$.Entities Tony and Zuzana's World - Wednesday, September 14, 2011 - Six Things That’ll Surprise You About.NET 4.0
I recently wrote an article for DevelopMentor ’s Developments entitled. You can read the entire article (republished just below this introduction) or if you’d rather see it as a quick set of 6 sides, you can see those here: Six Things That’ll Surprise You About.NET 4.0. In this article, we will explore some of the new features of the.NET 4.0 as well as Visual Studio 2010. 1 Visual Studio 2010. for the very first time an true open source will become and integral and supported part of Visual Studio and.NET? by Michael Kennedy. 5 WPF. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Wednesday, November 11, 2009 - Building a Cloud OS for.NET Developers - Part 2
How do we manage having Visual Studio and associated tools and servers universally accessible in the cloud, even on mobile devices such as iPads? At EC2 we can create a variety of Windows instances, get full admin access via remote desktop, and install anything we want (Visual Studio, SQL Server, MongoDB, etc). So you’ve logged in and you want to install Visual Studio, SQL Server, and other MSDN goodies. m a fan of Visual SVN. Articles Cloud Visual Studio web2.0But the one crucial aspect I left out was the developer tools. - 11 Killer Open Source Projects I Found with NuGet
It's a killer new way to find, install, maintain, and manage references to open source libraries in Visual Studio 2010. What I want to talk about is all the cool open source projects I found just by flipping through the pages of the NuGet directory in the Visual Studio "Add Library Package Reference" dialog. Keep in mind, that to get the latest version, you can just use the Visual Studio "Add Library Package Reference" dialog because of all the NuGet goodness. Articles ASP.NET NoSQL Open Source Tools Visual StudioHere you go. Enjoy! Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Wednesday, January 19, 2011 - Building a Cloud OS for.NET Developers – Part 2
In this second … Continue reading → Cloud Articles Visual StudioIn Part 1 of my Building a Cloud OS for.NET Developers series, I talked about setting up a pure cloud OS focused on developers. But the one crucial aspect I left out was the developer tools. - Building a Cloud OS for.NET Developers - Part 1
This article explores the options and potential of moving entirely “To The Cloud” for developers who normally demand significant offline power from their applications (IDEs, compilers, debuggers, etc). We’ll focus on.NET / Visual Studio developers, but I’m sure you can adapt this to your technology of choice. At the same time I need to be able to fire up Visual Studio and do some work with an unreliable or nonexistent Internet connection So I’m keeping my current “full” Windows system intact. What about Visual Studio? Installing “The Cloud”. %>
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