Navigation

Search

Categories

On this page

Memories from MSDN Unleashed: The Best of PDC event

Archive

Blogroll

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

RSS 2.0 | Atom 1.0 | CDF

Send mail to the author(s) E-mail

Total Posts: 120
This Year: 1
This Month: 0
This Week: 0
Comments: 40

Sign In
Pick a theme:

# Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Wednesday, January 28, 2009 9:42:35 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00) ( All things Microsoft )
I went to the MSDN Unleashed: The Best of PDC event at ConfigureSoft. David Yack and Rob Bagby were presenting on the topics originally presented at PDC
  • What to expect with C# 4.0
    • It's really just the distilled content that has been available since October. You could hear it straight from Anders himself. Dave did an awesome job though.
  • The Silverlight Control Toolkit
    • Microsoft is releasing code out of band for Silverlight for those who wish to live on the edge
  • REST with WCF and the WCF REST Starter Kit
    • Creating a REST-ful web service is dead simple using WCF. Add to it the starter kit and you get all sorts of free goodies out of the box to making even more dead simple. Once again, "It Just Works"
  • Overview of Windows Azure (“The Cloud OS”) and Azure Services
    • Azure = a cloud operating system + a set of developer services. Somethings you just gotta have a platform to write scalable apps on without worrying about the infrastructure.
We got some awesome "Rest in WCF" t-shirts with a photo of Rob's dog on it. I'm going to have to hang it on the wall so everyone will ask why I have a sleeping dog on a shirt. It's all because of Representational State Transfer of course!

Rob had some very funny lines I will quote often in the future as well.

Like the guy on the Ginsu knife commercial says, But that's not all you get
...that's a potentially marriage limiting maneuver...
Thanks for the great presentation gentlemen. Thanks to Microsoft for continuing these events. They're a great way to digest the information.