I haven't written a blog for a long time, because I am too busy recently. Using my MSN signature is busy as a donkey!
In addition, the recent focus is on the field of point shifting ALM. More research on cloud computing is started. On the one hand, it is the need of the company's projects, and on the other hand, it also wants to see some practical technical content. Basically, in the past few weeks, I live in the daytime: Silverlight + Entity Framework + SQL 2008 R2; evening: Windows azure. I really feel like I am a donkey. It doesn't matter. It's just not a donkey.
The last weekend's pdc10 was really exciting. I saw a lot of new applications, especially Pixar's cloud computing rendering platform. It was really amazing. But I was most excited to see Brian Harry in Keynote. This guy rarely showed up in Microsoft's keynote. Although he still looked like farmer, he still felt very kind. Of course, the most important thing is that he announced the success of TFS migration on the cloud platform: http://blogs.msdn.com/ B /bharry/archive/2010/10/28/tfs-on-windows-azure-at-the-pdc.aspx
In fact, the significance of this incident is not only that Microsoft has added a choice for the TFS business model, but more importantly, it conveys a message, complex applications such as TFs can be successfully transplanted on azure. OurProgramYes, and there is a solution that can be reused.
Brian listed a series of problems and solutions in his blog, which are worthy of our reference.