Advertisement
Promo

Application development Toolkit

Microsoft Futures

Microsoft details plans for Visual Studio and .NET

Adrian Bridgwater ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 21 Nov 2008 15:15 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

...can also view the historical debugging information and machine state at the time of the problem. By lowering barriers and making sure everyone works from the same repository of information, you get a far greater sense of a team and that, for us, represents democratisation.

Visual Studio Team System [VSTS] 2010 architecture is claimed to bring non-technical users into the modelling process to define business and system functionality. How do we keep business managers reigned in to keep their requirement specifications under control?
Carter: It's all about transparency. Through VSTS we will aim to try and make available all the reporting and business intelligence necessary for business users to be able to view the status of a project. So if that reporting exists and is delivered to business users via tools they're used to, such as Excel and Outlook, it must represent a positive addition to the project at hand.

Your next Windows Azure tools are aligned to development for the cloud. How will they look and feel in practice?
Zander: We want to make it possible for developers to use all their .NET programming skills for the cloud. There will be a sandbox security model similar to that which we have provided with the ASP.NET web application framework. The best practices you can find with that technology will also extend to Azure on the cloud.

Read this

Q&A
From Disney to 'dogfooding': Life as Microsoft's CIO

Can Microsoft's chief information officer, former Disney executive Tony Scott, work a little magic on the customer experience?

Read more +

Carter: With Azure, the key thing is everything will look very familiar to you as a Visual Studio developer, because the programming model is the same. With the same components at hand, we hope developers will see a movement to the cloud as a natural and evolutionary extension.

What tools do you have to help developers with the techniques chip developers say are necessary for multicore?
Zander: In terms of VS2010 and parallel computing, there is a new set of libraries specifically built to enable to developers to write parallel code. At the base level we have a new runtime called the concurrency runtime, which allows me as a developer to take advantage of all the cores present on the machine. Secondly, the tooling inside VS2010 will be enhanced so both the debugger and the profiler are able to track all the extra work you're scheduling for the machine and see how well it is executing.

You're making a big play for web developers with the new products. Other than full support for Silverlight, which we would have expected, what else is new?
Zander: Of course, it's more than just Silverlight support, but as we head towards version 3.0 that will be important. With the new products we have incorporated new model-view-controller (MVC) patterns and we're also shipping the jQuery JavaScript library with VS2010 including full IntelliSense support for auto-completion functions.

VSTS 2010's testing and debugging features have been described as a black-box recorder to help eliminate non-reproducible bugs. Do you think you'll 'eat your own dog food' and improve your own beta releases with this technology?
Zander: Absolutely. One of the sessions people will have seen at PDC and Tech Ed delivered by Stephanie Saad was designed specifically so she could document all the instances where Microsoft is 'dog-fooding' on the development of VS2010 and VSTS. It is used internally right across teams like the Microsoft Office division where thousand of developers will be contributing code at any one time. In fact using 'dog-fooding' as a verb in this way has been the norm at Microsoft for some time now. We're pretty comfortable with it.

Next

Previous

1 2


  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
4 out of 6 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

More in this Special Report

Windows 7 — as good as it gets

Windows 7 — as good as it gets

Microsoft's latest version of Windows looks solid and useful. But it's no guide to the future of IT — or Microsoft more

Windows 7 RC1 made available for download

Windows 7 RC1 made available for download

Some features have been dropped since the beta version, but Microsoft has decided to allow the release candidate version to stay functional for more than a year more

Internet Explorer 8: screenshot gallery

Internet Explorer 8: screenshot gallery

Internet Explorer 8 is now available for download. Here's a gallery showing some of its new features more

Leader: Microsoft's mobile strategy has gone missing

Leader: Microsoft's mobile strategy has gone missing

Enterprise mobile technology advances on all fronts, except one. Microsoft needs to make its strategy plain more

How Microsoft can make Windows 7 a success

How Microsoft can make Windows 7 a success

Many businesses have given Vista a wide berth. Microsoft must focus on five areas to make sure Windows 7 doesn't suffer the same fate, argues TechRepublic's Jason Hiner more

Ozzie: Success of Azure comes down to trust

Ozzie: Success of Azure comes down to trust

In an interview, Ray Ozzie says businesses will be taking a risk by placing core operations in Microsoft's datacentre, but that the software giant has more to lose if things go bad more

Photos: A screenshot tour of Microsoft's Windows 7 RC1

Photos: A screenshot tour of Microsoft's Windows 7 RC1

A look at the release candidate of Windows 7 that was released to the public by Microsoft on Thursday more

Microsoft: Many Windows 7 features can be disabled

Microsoft: Many Windows 7 features can be disabled

Customers will have the option of disabling a number of features of the operating system, should they so choose more

Microsoft's secret deals on open source

Microsoft's secret deals on open source

Microsoft has been building a portfolio of open-source licence deals. It still prefers secrecy more

Microsoft unveils Office apps in the browser

Microsoft unveils Office apps in the browser

At the Professional Developers Conference, the software maker gave a preview of its newly confirmed browser-based Office apps more

Microsoft offers details on forthcoming app store

Microsoft offers details on forthcoming app store

The software maker says developers who want to sell via the Windows Marketplace for Mobile will pay $99 a year and get to keep 70 percent of the proceeds more

Microsoft: No second beta of Windows 7

Microsoft: No second beta of Windows 7

The first beta version of the successor to Windows Vista is available more

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:






Video icon

Video

Discussions

blackholesun blackholesun

Mobile Broadband on Linux, Revisited

Wednesday 30 December 2009, 7:04 PM

8 comments
blackholesun blackholesun

Attack Site!

Wednesday 30 December 2009, 6:25 PM

4 comments
Jake Rayson Jake Rayson

Attack Site!

Wednesday 30 December 2009, 4:30 PM

4 comments

Win a Creative Zen X-Fi2 player and accessories

Win a Creative Zen X-Fi2 player and accessories

What is ZDNet UK's usual tagline?

Competition closes - 14 Jan 2010


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters