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09-05-2005, 18:41
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New Team System Stuff - 2005-05-09
Από το είδος των post που είναι πολύ ενδιαφέροντα. Από το Blog του Rob Caron. | New Team System Stuff - 2005-05-09 | | Visual Studio Team System -
If you’re installing Beta 2 using Virtual PC, you should learn to appreciate the almighty differencing disk. -
Chris Menegay shares Q&A from recent his recent Team System classes here and here. -
Mickey Gousset had no trouble with his Team Foundation Server install, but Sam Gentile ran into what’s become a common source of pain. Be sure to get the latest version of the Installation Guide – you will not succeed without it. See this post in Ask Burton, too. -
My team, the Visual Studio Team System User Education team, has launched a new team blog. -
Steven Borg is posting tips & tricks, as well as potential bugs (I, II and III) that I hope he’ll add to the Product Feedback Center. -
According to a recent post by Josh Ledgard, the Team System forums have the highest answer rate (82%) compared to the other MSDN forums! Got a Team System question? Ask it in the Team System forums. -
A Hitchhiker’s Guide to Visual Studio 2005 Team System has been translated into several languages. Architecture -
Barry Gervin posted his concerns about the current Distributed System Designers and the need for a “Physical Datacenter Designer”. Be sure to read the comments from Joel Semeniuk and Alex Torone. Development -
Eric Jarvi has started an area on the Channel 9 wiki for the Profiler. Eric also shares a tip for printing the call tree view from a Profiler performance report. -
See Ian Huff’s post for an introduction to Code Coverage in Team System. - The Class Designer team blog has a post about integration with source code control and a post on using exporting Class Designer diagrams.
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Matt Pietrek has a follow-on post about Event Tracing for Windows. -
Ian Huff shares a new feature in .NET 2.0 for making internal functions available to another assembly. -
Patrick Steele has a post on the benefit of unit tests when refactoring code. Project Management - David Anderson blogs about the reason to avoid quality initiatives.
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Jeffrey Palermo reports that the Agile Methodologies with .NET BOF was accepted for Tech·Ed 2005 US. -
Dave Froslie blogs about one of the challenges when entering a S*** sprint – having a well-defined backlog. -
Nick Malik has the second part of his post on comparing FDD with traditional project management. -
Team Software Development - There are two Team Foundation chats scheduled this week.
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In this post, Adam Singer helps explain the concept of workspaces in Team Foundation source control. -
I think I missed these posts last month, but Jeff Lucovsky has a two-part post (I & II) about using RSS to keep tracking of checkins. Jeff also has a post about the importance of Watson reports. -
If you’re having trouble getting Team Build to work, like Adam did, review this post on the Team Foundation team blog. - The vstseclipse.org site is up and running.
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Omar Villareal has some has a tip if you get the “Unable to connect to BIS service” message. - Andrew Duthie blogs about custom check-in policies.
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Adam Singer share a tip on remapping working folders in Team Foundation source control. -
Rick LaPlante shared our recent Team Foundation dogfood statistics, which John Lawrence helped illustrate with some charts. -
Eric Jarvi has a tip for copying & pasting work item lists from Excel to e-mail. - Abhinaba Basu shows how to create a build type in Team Build.
- John Lawrence blogs about the permanence of work items in Team Foundation.
- Eric Jarvi shares his impression of Team Foundation reporting.
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As you may know, Team System is not a Redmond-only affair. We have teams in many locations, including North Carolina. Buck Hodges blogs about a recent news item in the local paper there. Testing -
Tim Weaver is blogging his concerns about load testing in Team System, some of which are known bugs that the team is addressing. - Here are some useful testing posts I’ve collected:
Visual Studio Team System Workshop -
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Steve Cook questions the need for mandatory modeling, which was proposed at symposium he attended. - As Andrew Duthie notes, there’s a new workbench in the workshop – the System Definition Model (SDM) SDK workbench.
Original Link
| | | On-Demand Team System Webcasts from the Experts | | The following webcasts from the experts on their subjects are now available for on-demand viewing: Visual Studio 2005 Team System: Enterprise-Class Version Control Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Team System (VSTS) provides a completely new, highly scalable and robust version control system. This webcast details the many new features of VSTS version control including shelving, check-in policy and support for distributed development work. Presenter: Doug Neumann, Program Manager, Microsoft Corporation How and Why Process Guidance Matters in Visual Studio 2005 Team System Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Team System (VSTS) allows teams to select a process template to shape how the team works together. This session will help you understand key considerations in selecting the template best suited to your team and the project you are working on. Learn how process templates affect the way VSTS works and why it is important for your team to select the appropriate process for your projects. Presenter: Bindia Hallauer, Senior Product Manager, Microsoft Corporation Enterprise Project Management and Reporting in Visual Studio 2005 Team System Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Team System (VSTS) provides all the suite tools to pour data into a central data warehouse. This webcast shows how to use Microsoft SQL Server Reporting Services to generate real-time and historical reports on the many facets of your project. We also show many of the ready to run reports built into VSTS. Presenter: Allen Clark, Program Manager, Microsoft Corporation Test-Driven Development Using Visual Studio Team System Why test-driven development? Although developers have been unit testing their code for years, tests are typically performed after the code is designed and written. As a great number of developers can attest, writing tests after the fact is difficult to do and often omitted when time runs out. Test-driven development attempts to resolve this problem and produce higher quality, well-tested code by putting the cart before the horse and writing the tests before we write the code. This webcast demonstrates how you can use Microsoft Visual Studio Team System to implement test-driven development in your organization. Presenter: Jim Newkirk, Development Lead, Microsoft Corporation Implementing and Customizing MSF 4.0 Process Guidance within Visual Studio 2005 Team System Visual Studio Team System provides a rich environment and integrated support for software development processes. While this new development platform ships with two predefined software development processes, some organizations will choose to incorporate their own "secret sauce" to add competitive advantage. This presentation and demonstration will show you how to make modifications to the existing processes, Microsoft Solutions Framework (MSF) for Agile Software Development and MSF for Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) Process Improvement, as well to incorporate your software development process into Microsoft Visual Studio Team System. Presenter: Randy Miller, Program Manager, Microsoft Corporation Managing Work with Visual Studio 2005 Team System How does the Microsoft Visual Studio team track and manage their work? This session and explores how various teams at Microsoft use Visual Studio Team System to customize work item types, create queries and set up notifications to facilitate teamwork and visibility. Learn how to use state model transitions to automate workflow throughout the team, and use rich history logging to collaboratively solve problems and communicate progress. See how Team System allows you to analyze and trend historical information to view project progress and track status. Presenter: Kevin Kelly, Program Manager, Microsoft Corporation Find more Team System webcasts here. Original Link | | George J.
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17-05-2005, 06:05
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New Team System Stuff - 2005-05-16
O Rob Caron συνεχίζει να κάνει ενδιαφέροντα posts για το Visual Studio Team System:
| New Team System Stuff - 2005-05-16 | | Visual Studio Team System My Team System Posts Architecture - Ali Pasha – Why do ASP.NET WebService and ASP.NET WebApplication look alike on the Application Designer?
- Eileen Brown – DSI Demo
- AmberPoint – AmberPoint Developer’s Edition Software Ships with Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Beta 2
Development Project Management Team Software Development Testing - Eric Jarvi – VSTS Tip: load test results could not be restored...
- Eric Jarvi – VSTS Tip: publishing ongoing manual test results
- Jomo Fisher – Hack the Build: Code Quality and Test Driven Development at Microsoft
- Accentient – Is your test project missing its "test run configuration"?
Original Link | | George J.
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