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2009-10-23
帅!太帅了!Windows 7的Bing桌面主题
哈哈哈,好大一只海龟呀
现在,可以随时更换桌面了,心情想换就换
Bing的开发人员终于展示了自己Windows 7上的杰作,一个主题包,它目前包含20张来自Bing的免费背景,您只要安装这个主题包就可以随意进行切换。
之前,Bing的背景就是许多美化爱好狂人仰慕的对象,有人做了脚本来让自己的桌面与Bing同步,现在不用了,安装一下这个,然后右键点击桌面空白区域看看? -
2009-10-22
Windows 7 Party! Join us~
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2009-10-21
Visual Studio 2010 Beta 2 Training Kit发布
紧随的发布,微软今天发布了Visual Studio 2010 Beta 2 Training Kit。通过这个Training Kit,通过丰富的PPT和动手实验,我们可以了解和学习beta2中的各种新特性,为迎接明年正式版的到来打下基础。
The Beta 2 version of DPE’s Visual Studio 2010 Training Kit is now live (you can find it at http://tinyurl.com/Beta2Training).
A training kit includes presentations, hands-on labs, and demos. This content is designed to help you learn how to utilize a variety of Visual Studio 2010 and .NET Framework 4 technologies.
The Beta 2 release of the Training Kit contains 15 presentations, 19 hands-on labs, and 13 demos. Many technologies are covered in this release, including: C# 4, VB 10, F#, Parallel Extensions, Windows Communication Foundation, Windows Workflow, Windows Presentation Foundation, ASP.NET 4, Entity Framework, ADO.NET Data Services, Managed Extensibility Framework, and Visual Studio Ultimate.
There’s a lot of content covered here. See for yourself:
Presentations
- What’s New in .NET Framework 4
- What’s New in Visual Studio 2010
- Introduction to ASP.NET MVC
- Introduction to Managed Extensibility Framework
- Introduction to .NET RIA Services
- Introduction to “Velocity”
- Parallel Computing for Managed Developers
- Web Deployment with Visual Studio 2010
- What’s New in ASP.NET AJAX 4
- What’s New in ASP.NET Web Forms 4
- What’s New in C# and VB
- What’s New in ADO.NET Data Services
- What’s New in Entity Framework 4
- What’s New in Windows Presentation Foundation 4
- What’s New in Windows Workflow 4
Hands-On Labs
- Introduction to ADO.NET Data Services
- Exercise 1: Creating and Consuming ADO.NET Data Services
- Exercise 2: Consuming ADO.NET Data Services using ASP.NET AJAX
- Exercise 3: Extending Data Services with Service Operations and Interceptors
- Exercise 4: Adding Client-Side Paging with Row Count
- ASP.NET AJAX 4
- Exercise 1: Leveraging a Client-Side Template
- Exercise 2: Using the DataView Control
- Exercise 3: Creating Custom Markup Extensions
- Exercise 4: Declaratively Instantiating Behaviors
- Creating Plan My Night – ASP.NET MVC Application
- Exercise 1: Creating an ASP.NET MVC Application, Plan My Night
- Exercise 2: Creating Entity Framework Data Model
- Exercise 3: Adding AJAX For Searching Activities
- Enhancing Plan My Night – ASP.NET MVC Application
- Exercise 1: Adding Caching using “Velocity”
- Exercise 2: Structuring an Application using MVC Areas
- Introduction to ASP.NET Web Forms 4
- Exercise 1: Controlling Server Control ClientIds
- Exercise 2: Enabling Bi-Directional Routing Support
- Exercise 3: Granular ViewState
- Microsoft Office Programmability in C# and Visual Basic
- Introduction to F#
- Exercise 1: Types in F#
- Exercise 2: Using the Let keyword
- Exercise 3: Functions
- Exercise 4: Lists
- Exercise 5: Pattern Matching and Recursion
- Exercise 6: Types and Discriminated Unions
- Introduction to the Managed Extensibility Framework
- Exercise 1: Using MEF To Dynamically Add Modules to an Application
- Exercise 2: Dynamically extending a form
- Introduction to “Velocity”
- Exercise 1: Setting up and running “Velocity”
- Exercise 2: Programming directly against “Velocity” as a generic object cache
- Exercise 3: Using Velocity’s SessionState provider with ASP.NET
- Exercise 4 (Optional): Configure “Velocity” Cache in a cluster
- Introduction to Workflow 4
- Exercise 1: Hello Workflow
- Exercise 2: Refactoring Workflows
- Exercise 3: The CodeActivity
- Exercise 4: Dynamic Workflows with XAML
- Exercise 5: Testing Workflows
- Exercise 6: WorkflowApplication
- Exercise 7: Adding If/Else Logic
- Exercise 8: Error Handling
- Exercise 9: Activity Designers
- Exercise 10: Hosted Designer
- Introduction to Parallel Extensions
- Exercise 1: Parallelize existing algorithm using static Parallel helper class
- Exercise 2: Create and run parallelized Tasks
- Exercise 3: Using the Task<T> class to create and run tasks that return a value
- Exercise 4: Parallelizing LINQ queries using PLINQ
- Test-Driven Development in Visual Studio 2010
- WCF Service Discovery
- Exercise 1: Ad-Hoc Discovery
- Exercise 2: Metadata Extensions
- Exercise 3: Announcements
- Exercise 4: Discovery Proxy
- Exercise 5: Legacy Discovery
- Web Development in Visual Studio 2010
- Exercise 1: Using HTML Code Snippets
- Exercise 2: Web.config Transformations
- Exercise 3: Packaging and Deploying Web Applications
- Exercise 4: Packaging and Deploying Web Applications for IIS
- Building a Data-Driven Master/Detail Business Form using WPF 4
- Multi-touch Gesture – MFC
- Multi-touch WMTouch – MFC
- Ribbon – MFC
- Taskbar - MFC
Demos
- ContosoAutomotive (Parallel Extensions + MEF + WPF)
- AdventureWorks AJAX
- ASP.NET AJAX Ten-In-One
- Managed Languages Ten-In-One
- Barrier
- CountdownEvent
- Hello Visual Studio 2010
- Introduction to the Managed Extensibility Framework
- Parallel Baby Names
- Parallel For Loop
- Parallel LINQ (PLINQ)
- Parallel Tasks
- “Velocity”
Enjoy!
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2009-10-20
Visual Studio 2010 beta2发布,MSDN旧貌换新颜
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2009-10-19
微软发布Visual Studio 2010 beta2 - [软件开发]
核心提示:对于MSDN订阅用户,今天可以获得Beta2,其他用户10月21日可以获得beta2.
微软同时宣布,将于2010年3月22日正式发布Visual Studio 2010.
Microsoft has struggled with the best way to sell Visual Studio's application lifecycle management ever since it introduced Team System against IBM's Rational four years back. As the company prepares to release Visual Studio 2010 for Windows 7, Office 2010 and a new line Windows servers about to come on tap, Microsoft is taking another stab.
This time, the company is spicing the packaging mix by throwing in hours of access to its Azure cloud plus upgrades to a new, top-of-the-line Visual Studio ALM package.
The changes will be unveiled today, as Microsoft announces the second Visual Studio 2010 beta and .NET Framework 4 beta two have been released to MSDN subscribers with everyone else getting code on October 21.
Also, Microsoft will announce Visual Studio 2010 will officially launch on March 22, 2010.
Visual Studio 2010 and.NET Framework 4 have been promised as "the most significant release" Microsoft's had of the tools suite and framework "in a number of years."
Microsoft says this about all products, but we assume this time it's referring to Visual Studio 2005 and Team System 2005 that debuted Microsoft's ALM push and came before Visual Studio 2008.
New features include Windows 7 and SharePoint 2010 tools, drag-and-drop bindings with Silverlight and Windows Presentation Foundation, the inclusion of the Dynamic Language Runtime (DLR) for programming with scripting languages, and support for parallel programming.
It's the packaging mix that sees the most change, though.
Microsoft will chop nine Visual Studio SKUs down to four, with the focus on ALM. Microsoft does not seem to be tampering with the Express editions, which add another five SKUs.
Visual Studio Development Edition, Database Edition, Architect Edition and Test Edition will go. These will give way to Visual Studio 2010 Professional priced $799 and no MSDN subscription option, Professional priced $1,199 for a new MSDN subscription, Premium priced $5,469 for a new MSDN subscription, and the new completely Ultimate Visual Studio SKU that will be priced $11,924 for a new MSDN subscription.
You can compare these MSDN subscription prices with those for Visual Studio 2008, here.
Senior director of developer marketing Dave Mendlen said Microsoft is cutting the number of Visual Studio SKUs following customer feedback. Mendlen said the new packages reflect the way developers work, by combining code, test, architect and collaborate options. This is a reversal, as the previous philosophy was separate Visual Studios for separate roles.
What do you get in your new packages?
Visual Studio 2010 Professional minus the MSDN subscription will feature core developer features, the integrated development environment, platform support and parallel debugging. With the MSDN sub, you'll actually get the current and previous client and server operating system runtimes.
Premium will include code analysis, database deployment, user interface testing and test impact analysis. The addition of the MSDN sub will give you the server platforms for Dynamics, SharePoint and Exchange, plus Office, Expression and some Team Foundation Server features.
Ultimate will include all these features, plus UML tools, historical debugging, manual testing products and load testing along with the full Visual Studio 2010 Team Foundation Server.
Microsoft will chuck Azure cloud compute time, storage and data transfer into the MSDN Premium subscription. Developers will get 750 computing hours per month for eight months - time that will commence once Azure becomes commercially available, expected next month.
The company will also try to upsell you under it's so-called Ultimate offer. Developers on the soon-to-be canned Visual Studio 2008 Team System editions or on Visual Studio 2008 who splash out and upgrade to the Professional-level MSDN subscription before March 22 will get Ultimate at no cost when it ships. Those on Visual Studio 2008 Professional and MSDN Professional now will get Visual Studio 2010 Premium at no extra cost.


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