| |
browse.develop.com
Browse.develop.com is a community that was established to collect and
organize valuable web information. Our technical staff have selected and
indexed information and courses that they feel will help you stay
current on best practices across the SDLC.
|
51 Articles match "Course","Skills"
| Related DevelopMentor Courses | MORE | | 10 pieces of advice for teams Of course, if you are a self-managing team you should all read this list. I have started to write up a more useful description of Xanpan. In doing so two things have happened. First I’ve realised that I have an awful lot I would like to say about it, I’m terrified it will become another book. Second, I’m becoming more and more aware of how Xanpan differs from Scrum, XP and Kanban. As a result I expect this blog will get a little quieter. But before the end of the year I’d like to get a few entries finished and published which have been languishing for a while. Allan Kelly's Blog - Thursday, November 22, 2012 Guerrilla.NET (US) Training In addition to the latest core.NET topics, we'll be covering cutting-edge content that you simply cannot get at other courses including multi-touch programming, Mono.NET, and NoSQL / MongoDB. Day 4 The NoSQL Movement, LINQ, and MongoDB iOS Programming with.NET and MonoTouch Open Session (work on challenges or try what you've learned on your project) Design Patterns for Testability (DI, IoC, and unit testing) Coding Challenge Contest (show off your coding skills and win prizes) [after?class] C# : Leverage new features of C# including asynchronous methods from C# 5.0, and jQuery. DevelopMentor Courses - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 Advanced.NET Training In this course, you learn to: Write code that works well with the garbage collector Use the latest threading library: PFx Build code that can scale across multiple cores Build pluggable and testable and applications using MEF and Inversion of Control Improve memory usage through proper understanding of assemblies, types, and JIT compilation Debug difficult problems using WinDBG, SOS, and ADPLUS The goal of Advanced.NET is to introduce developers to areas of.NET that are complex or often cause confusion. What are the best practices for parallelizing algorithms? or do you? DevelopMentor Courses - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 |
29 Articles match "Course","Skills"
| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | Requirements whose job are they anyway? 'Later this week I’m giving a talk at Skills Matter entitled: “Business Analyst, Product Manager, Product Owner, Spy!” base this statement partly on the fact that when I deliver my Agile for Business Analysts course (at Skills Matter later this week and another version then later this month at Developer Focus ) I find people on the course who I would regard as Product Managers but they - and their employees often have never heard of the Product Manager role. wonder if Developers really have the skills to understand the need side. Allan Kelly's Blog - Monday, April 15, 2013 10 pieces of advice for teams Of course, if you are a self-managing team you should all read this list. I have started to write up a more useful description of Xanpan. In doing so two things have happened. First I’ve realised that I have an awful lot I would like to say about it, I’m terrified it will become another book. Second, I’m becoming more and more aware of how Xanpan differs from Scrum, XP and Kanban. As a result I expect this blog will get a little quieter. But before the end of the year I’d like to get a few entries finished and published which have been languishing for a while. Allan Kelly's Blog - Thursday, November 22, 2012 Development Partners - branching out That doesn’t mean I’m giving up Agile - although I must admit to getting sick of the word - nor does it mean I’m giving up delivering training courses - if anything I’m expanding here, Giovanni Asproni now delivers the courses too. Better : Alan, Giovanni and I truly believe we can do a better job than many of the companies out there, call it skills, call it experience, put it down to Agile or Craftsmanship or even the ACCU. My company, Software Strategy , has existed for over five years now and has been successful within the terms I’ve set for it. No this is an addition. Allan Kelly's Blog - Wednesday, October 3, 2012 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - MSDN Roadshow in Maine
for the accommodations and of course Microsoft for making Chris and Jim drive all the way up north :-). Of course, these features aren’t rough to use, and you’ll get into the swing of things in no time. Continue to ply your existing skills with an improved Web Forms experience, or quickly spin up interactive forms-over-data sites with Dynamic Data. And of course you can hook right into ASP.NET MVC to craft testable and extensible solutions. Almost manage to miss it in my inbox, but I just signed up for the Maine MSDN Roadshow event! Sign up here. The Blomsma Code - Friday, May 7, 2010 - SynchronizationContext assists layering
So I decided to write an app to help test them on it…Ok so I’m sure there are tons of them out there…but you can’t beat a home grown solution ;-) Seriously there is a couple of areas I am focusing on at the moment, Ramping up for DM’s.NET architecture course. This seemed like a good exercise where I could put both these skills to good use. My WPF skills aren’t there yet that I could confidently build the UI that quick, but in a few weeks I do want to add a WPF gui. The type also had methods for requesting the next question and submitting an answer. .NET Mutterings - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - 10 pieces of advice for teams
Of course, if you are a self-managing team you should all read this list. I have started to write up a more useful description of Xanpan. In doing so two things have happened. First I’ve realised that I have an awful lot I would like to say about it, I’m terrified it will become another book. Second, I’m becoming more and more aware of how Xanpan differs from Scrum, XP and Kanban. As a result I expect this blog will get a little quieter. But before the end of the year I’d like to get a few entries finished and published which have been languishing for a while. Allan Kelly's Blog - Thursday, November 22, 2012 - Translating Software Maintainability Metrics into dollars
offer a basic solution: A project which scores high on maintainability can be maintained by junior to medior skilled developers. Of course the increase is not quite linear so if we put it on a sliding scale/table we get: Maintainability Index. Nowadays there are a variety of tools and services available that provide insight into the quality of the code. In order to quantify quality a number of metrics are collected and used to create a maintainability index number. Visual Studio Team System gathers metrics to put a number on the quality of your code. Increase in maintenance cost. The Blomsma Code - Tuesday, March 9, 2010 - Article: Azure Storage
Azure allows you to use your existing skills to build essentially the same.NET applications you are familiar with and "deploy them to the cloud.". These scalable, reliable, and geographically-replicated applications that run on Azure depend on data of course. I recently wrote an article for DevelopMentor's Developments newsletter entitled Azure Storage. Read it at the DevelopMentor website here: [link]. I've republished here for my readers. Enjoy! Developments: Azure Storage. by Michael Kennedy. Listen to this article as a podcast: Azure-Storage-Article-Kennedy.mp3 ]. Listing 3. Michael C. Kennedy's Weblog - Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - How to improve a team's velocity?
Adopting TDD and pursuing refactoring may throw up another problem which people would rather keep quiet about: developer skills levels. So, invest in developer training, buy them books, send them on courses, bring in coaches, set up book study groups and other exchanges were developers can learn to do things better. By way of wrapping up my velocity mini-series ( Two ways to fill and iteration , Filling an iteration too well , and Velocity Targeting and Velocity Inflation ) I’m going to end with some advice on how to improve a team’s velocity. But back to software. Allan Kelly's Blog - Thursday, July 1, 2010 - Pay Attention: The World is Changing
whole generation that can’t interact because their skills are limited to inhabiting a fantasy world on a screen." With no eye contact and limited verbal communication, I wondered how these kids would ever learn to flirt, an important social skill for anyone interested in every attracting a mate (IMHO). Of course some would just call me a fuddy-duddy and point out that they are probably interacting via those devices. "I have an A in your course, and I can repeat back what you said." link]. web surfing). You might be interrupted by an IM conversation. Derek Hatchard blogs on - Wednesday, June 10, 2009 %>
| | |