SEO for Developers with Chris Love
.NET Rocks!29 Tammi 2019

SEO for Developers with Chris Love

Should developers care about search engine optimization (SEO)? Chris Love says yes! Carl and Richard talk with Chris about how SEO impacts consumer-facing websites and what developers can do to include SEO in their development process. The good news is, many of the things we do routinely in web development help with SEO, including mobile-first development, using HTTPS and focusing on performance. But there's more to be done, and Chris digs into important bits - check out the tools in the show notes for more ideas on how to make your website more SEO friendly!

Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

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OpenSilver with Giovanni Albani

OpenSilver with Giovanni Albani

Got Silverlight apps? Carl and Richard talk to Giovanni Albani about the OpenSilver project - building an open-source version of Silverlight that runs without a plugin, using WebAssembly. Giovanni talks about companies he has communicate with that have Silverlight apps with hundreds of thousands of lines of code - not a simple thing to rewrite. The goal of OpenSilver is to let you migrate those applications.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

29 Heinä 202059min

The Open Source Ecosystem, .NET Foundation, and Microsoft with Sebastien Lambla

The Open Source Ecosystem, .NET Foundation, and Microsoft with Sebastien Lambla

Grenades with love! Carl and Richard talk to Sebastien Lambla about the state of the .NET open source ecosystem today, the role that Microsoft plays in it, and what the .NET Foundation could do in the future! Seb talks about the challenges of making open source projects in the .NET ecosystem when Microsoft gets involved - and how tough it is to stay involved when a megacorporation goes a different way. Is it damaging the ecosystem? The conversation turns to the value of diversity and the potential to make the ecosystem better. A key factor is the .NET Foundation - and voting is open as of July 21!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

22 Heinä 202057min

C# 9 with Mads Torgersen

C# 9 with Mads Torgersen

What's coming in C# 9? Carl and Richard talk to the Mads Torgersen, the leader of the C# team, about the rapidly approaching C# 9. Mads explains that with .NET 5 coming in the fall, he felt there should be a new version of C# as well - so in less than a year since C# 8, they're going to have another version! That being said, the feature set of C# 9 is not as aggressive as it was in C# 8, with a focus on making immutable coding easier. And the whole development process is being done in public, on GitHub. So if you want to check out the bits, go for it!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

16 Heinä 202057min

ASP.NET Core API Endpoints with Steve Smith

ASP.NET Core API Endpoints with Steve Smith

Ready to simplify and organize your MVC app? Carl and Richard talk to Steve Smith about his open-source project called ASP.NET Core API Endpoints. Steve digs into the problems around the controller part of MVC - as a project gets bigger, it gets harder to manage all of the elements associated with a controller. His Endpoints library cleans up this issue, to transform the MVC pattern into the Request-EndPoint-Response pattern, with simpler code and an easy project to manage. Check it out!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

8 Heinä 202051min

Testing using nDepend with Patrick Smacchia

Testing using nDepend with Patrick Smacchia

How do you do static testing in your applications? Carl and Richard talk to Patrick Smacchia of nDepend - one of the original testing products for .NET, stretching back to the very beginning! Patrick talks about how nDepend has grown over the years to provide a variety of tools for helping you to visualize the quality of your code, and to detect code smells - that is, aspects of code that may indicate a problem. The conversation dives into building out rules in projects to do static evaluation as code is created so you can catch problems early, to determine when its time to refactor older code!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

2 Heinä 202056min

Elements Mercury with Marc Hoffman

Elements Mercury with Marc Hoffman

Are there alternative versions of VB.NET? Soon! Carl and Richard talk to Marc Hoffman of RemObjects Software about Elements, their cross-platform compiler for Oxygene (Object Pascal), C#, Java, Swift, Go and soon, VB.NET. Marc discusses the relationship between platforms and languages and the idea that, at least for this array of languages, they can all work together. The conversation dives into why you might want to take an existing Java app, compile it in Elements, and then build C# components for it. And then there's VB.NET - the Mercury Element. Coming soon to a cross-compiler near you!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

25 Kesä 202053min

.NET Multi-Platform App UI with Scott Hunter

.NET Multi-Platform App UI with Scott Hunter

Ready to go to Maui? Carl and Richard talk to Scott Hunter about the .NET Multi-Platform App UI or MAUI for short. Scott talks about how the next versions of .NET are focused on unifying the elements that go into .NET to make One .NET. And that includes the UI stacks - including Xamarin! The evolution of Xamarin into .NET means that all UI stacks will be treated equally. And that leads to the .NET Multi-Platform App UI, letting you make a single project that covers Windows, OS/X, iOS and Android. Coming soon to a .NET near you!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

17 Kesä 202056min

The State of VB.NET with Kathleen Dollard

The State of VB.NET with Kathleen Dollard

Is VB.NET dead? Kathleen Dollard says No! Carl and Richard talk to Kathleen about a recent blog post from Microsoft about VB.NET not coming to .NET 5. Kathleen talks through the decision-making process that led to the blog post - not the death of VB.NET, but keeping VB.NET stable while C# is going through such significant changes. No, VB.NET is not going into maintenance, the same team is continuing to work on it - it's just going in a different direction from C#!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

10 Kesä 202055min