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  • MSDN Roadshow Re-Run

    I recently attended a re-run of the MSDN Roadshow at Microsoft's office in Victoria, London. It was an overview of the latest offerings from Microsoft in the development space. The agenda was as follows: ADO.Next - Entity Framework and ADO.NET Data Services - Eric Nelson ASP.Next - ASP.NET 3.5 SP1 and MVC - Mike Ormond Silverlight V2 - ...
    Posted to Simon Brown's Blog (Weblog) by simon.brown on November 8, 2008
  • MDM will be supported by ADO.Net Data Services

    In March of this year I published a blog entry called “MDM -> Entity Framework -> ADO.Net Data Services. Better together?” where I theorised about implementing ADO.Net Data Services (aka Astoria) as a means for exposing entities out of Microsoft’s forthcoming Master Data Management (MDM) product that is slated for release with Office 14. As ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on November 2, 2008
  • ADO.Net Data Services (aka Astoria) book available soon

    Congratulations are in order for my Conchango EMC Consulting Services colleagues Simon Evans and John Shaw who are soon to be first-time published authors when their book “Pro ADO.NET Data Services : Working with RESTful data” hits the virtual bookshelves (available for pre-order on Amazon).     Simon’s interest in RESTful web ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on October 27, 2008
  • SSDS is Microsoft's Amazon S3 competitor

    OK, as a follow-up to my last post I've now taken the time to read the SQL Server Data Services (SSDS) whitepaper and have managed to discern some interesting information. I figured I'd stick it up here for reference.   Administration Customers will be billed by account and each account will be accessed using a Windows Live ID The ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on March 6, 2008
  • MDM -> Entity Framework -> ADO.Net Data Services. Better together?

    I have blogged a little bit about ADO.Net Data Services (aka Astoria) and Microsoft MDM of late and once briefly mentioned the two in the same breath. As I have gotten to know a bit more about these two technologies I have been thinking more about how they might one day work together and I'm going to outline those thoughts in this blog. Before I ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on March 1, 2008
  • Windows Live Dev announcements

    There's some big announcements (in my opinion anyway) from Windows Live today. Read here:   David Treadwell on New and Updated Windows Live Platform Services http://dev.live.com/blogs/devlive/archive/2008/02/27/213.aspx   The highlights are: Messenger API that enables you to build your own Messenger client Contacts API ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on February 28, 2008
  • Astoria for SSIS

    I have been talking about Astoria on this blog for some time now. For those who don't know what Astoria is the 50000ft view of it is that its a technology that allows us to expose data over HTTP thus anything that talks HTTP can consume the data. HTTP in this context is the lowest-common-denominator because its simple and nearly everything can ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on September 29, 2007
  • Astoria and Web3S converge

    Three weeks ago I wrote this blog entry that raised a question mark over why Microsoft were coming out with two seemingly contradictory RESTful APIs (Astoria and Live Data) for exposing data. I linked to this forum posting where Federico Raggi from Microsoft stated that rather than being contradictory they were actually complementary. I questioned ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on September 20, 2007
  • Microsoft trial hosted data services

    There was some news over the weekend that probably went under the radar of most of you but I think its pretty important to know about.   Microsoft released an experimental version of a hosted data service built upon their data service technology, Astoria. Basically this service provides a very easy way of hosting your data in the cloud. ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on August 8, 2007
  • Astoria, SSIS, Popfly, et al...

    Just 3 days after my Astoria blog entry and some more well-timed Astoria-related news has hit the shelves. Jon Udell has done a podcast interview with the main man behind Astoria, Pablo Castro (I linked to Pablo's blog in my aforementioned blog entry). Jon talks about the interview here, Pablo talks about it ...
    Posted to SSIS Junkie (Weblog) by jamie.thomson on July 4, 2007
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