Morning Coffee 79
- Soma
announces
PopFly,
the “fun, easy way to build and share mashups, gadgets, Web pages,
and applications” from the Non-Professional tools
team. The PopFly team
blog has some
videos.
Sounds vaguely like Yahoo! Pipes, but
cooler. While most of the focus is on their browser-based mashup
creator, they also have
VS support for the
non-non-professionals among us.
- Eric Nelson
suggests
that the new Dynamics CRM systems is actually a LOB application
platform in it’s own right. More details in Ben Riga’s MIX
session.
(via
Gianpaolo)
- Sam Gentile is
worried
that C# is becoming to complex, especially when you also consider
how fast the platform is moving underneath. When you get your head
out of the debugger for a second and look at the Big Picture, it
certainly seems overwhelming. Is it just a question of getting used
to it? The first time I fired up the VS.net 2002 alpha and looked at
all the classes in the BCL, I had the same overwhelmed feeling, but
eventually I got over it. Or have things just gotten too big and
move to fast now? If so, it’s time for some new layers of
abstraction…
- Udi Dahan
writes
about building testable services. Testability has to be a core
consideration when building anything, but especially a reusable
framework. I’ve had similar thoughts about language design. How do
you unit test a DSL?
- Roberto Medrano of SOA Software
thinks
“maybe 20 percent of IT folks understand SOA and half of the rest
think they do”. Personally, I think most IT folks don’t agree on
what SOA is or should be. Furthermore, we don’t even have a common
lexicon to discuss it, so we end up talking past each other and
arguing about topics we agree on. I think Roberto is really saying
is “most people are wrong because they don’t agree with what I think
SOA is”. (via Jack van
Hoof)
- Jeffrey Snover
talks
about the virtuous cycle of .NET language support. His point is that
time spent learning .NET pays off as you transition between system
programming (C#, VB.NET), shell programming (PowerShell) and script
programming (IronPython, DLR). I’m not sure I would break them down
that way, but his point spot on.
- Clemens Vasters experiments with the new BizTalk
Services with a sample called
TweetieBot.
I agree 100% with his point about the assumption of centralization
will be challenged by the federation of personal services.
Posted by devhawk.net on May 18, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged Lanugages & SOA.
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1 Comment
Sam Gentile · May 18, 2007