Morning Coffee 119
- The biggest news of the week IMHO is Soma
announcing
the formation of an F# product team. Specifically, they will “fully
integrate the F# language into Visual Studio and continue
innovating and evolving F#.” Though Soma calls F# “another
first-class programming language on the CLR”, I get the feeling
there won’t be a “Visual F#” sku. Don Syme has more on the
news.
- In other Soma announcement
news,
Popfly is now in beta. More details on
what’s
new
on the Popfly Team Blog. I haven’t played with Popfly in depth, but
I think it’s got huge potential.
- Scott Guthrie
details
the upcoming ASP.NET MVC Framework. Personally, I’m not building web
apps much these days, so I’m not really invested one way or the
other. Given the interest in this approach, it’s nice to see the
ASP.NET team respond to the market, though I’m sure someone will
complain that we’re trying to kill off the various open-source MVC
Web frameworks that have sprung up.
- Over in Windows Live, they shipped a new
version
of Live Search Maps,
upgraded
WL Photo Gallery (which I’ve been digging) to support Flickr and
shipped an update to WL
Accounts
which allows you to link accounts.
- The Clarius folks keep churning out great tools for software factory
developers. The latest is the T4 editor,
which brings intellisense, color syntax highlighting and property
inspector support for Text Templating Transformation Toolkit (aka
T4) files. T4 files are used for code generation in both DSL
Toolkit
and
GAT.
- David Pallman (again via Sam
Gentile)
suggests
there are only three choices for infrastructure architecture:
None/Point-to-point, Centralized/Hub-and-Spoke and Thin/Bus. I get
the first two, but his explanation of the third goes to far into the
“magic framework” category for my taste. “Physically distributed but
logically centralized”? That doesn’t make any sense to me at all.
- Fellowship of the Ring makes its way onto
XBLM.
Alas, not in HD so I’ll stick w/ my extended four hour DVD
version
thankyouverymuch.
Posted by devhawk.net on October 19, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged ASP.NET, F#, Software Factories, Visual Studio, Windows Live & Xbox 360.
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