Richard Astbury Migrates Applications to Azure
.NET Rocks!15 Jan 2013

Richard Astbury Migrates Applications to Azure

Carl and Richard talk to Richard Astbury about migrating applications to Azure. The conversation starts out dealing with the basic idea of why you would migrate to the cloud - typically right before you have to buy more hardware to scale up or replace existing equipment. Richard then walks through the various challenges of migration, including migrating data, determining the particular style of cloud you want to use, maximizing advantages while minimizing cost. He talks about the fact that Java applications can be easier to migrate into Azure worker roles, since they tend to live in a sandbox and not touch the restricted elements of Windows inside the Azure world. Richard also digs into bootstrapping, providing links to tools to facilitate getting a worker role instance up and running with all the bits you need. Finally, the conversation digs into taking advantage of Azure - optimizing designs to reduce cost as well as utilizing the resources of Azure including Azure Fabric, Service Bus, diagnostics, etc.

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

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Mike Azocar and John Cook on Testing with Virtual Machines

Mike Azocar and John Cook on Testing with Virtual Machines

Mike Azocar and John Cook talk to Carl and Richard about using Virtualization for software testing. Of particular interest is the new features of the next version of Virtual PC. Carl also brings up the VPC vs VMWare issue. You have to listen to find out more!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

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Scott Cate on the MVP Pattern

Scott Cate on the MVP Pattern

Scott Cate talks about using the Model View Presenter pattern in ASP.NET, as well as his latest software creations and ventures.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

13 Sep 20071h 9min

Don Demsak on LINQ to XML

Don Demsak on LINQ to XML

Don Demsak (DonXML) discusses LINQ to XML and the new XML language features in Visual Basic.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

11 Sep 20071h 6min

Erik Meijer on LINQ!!

Erik Meijer on LINQ!!

Erik Meijer (a.k.a. the Head in the Box) talks to Carl and Richard in detail about LINQ from soup to nuts. This is a very technical discussion, and not an overview.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

6 Sep 20071h 6min

Larry O'Brien Talks Concurrency!

Larry O'Brien Talks Concurrency!

Larry O'Brien talks with Richard and Carl about how up and coming CPU architecture is going to invalidate current methods of concurrency programming, and what we can do about it.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

4 Sep 20071h 8min

Vishwas Lele on MOSS as an Application Platform

Vishwas Lele on MOSS as an Application Platform

Vishwas Lele talks about thinking of Microsoft Office Sharepoint Server as an application platform for .NET development. With all of the power and flexibility of MOSS, it can no longer be categorized simply as a web portal.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

30 Aug 20071h 5min

Michael Dunn on Speech Server and OCS

Michael Dunn on Speech Server and OCS

Michael Dunn tells Carl and Richard about Office Communication Server (OCS) 2007 which has incorporated Live Communication Server with Speech Server. Speech Server is one of the key development elements of OCS, providing the ability for .NET developers to build applications that can both speak and understand speech with minimal coding.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

28 Aug 20071h 6min

Jon Harrop Makes Us F#

Jon Harrop Makes Us F#

Jon Harrop introduces Carl and Richard to F#, a functional language that runs under the CLR. F# performs like C#, but being a functional language, has interactive scripting (similar to Python) but is rooted in the strong type inference and safety that other functional languages like ML focus on. Being in the CLR means you can build certain parts of your application in F# and then reference them from other languages, the same way VB.NET and C# interoperate.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations

23 Aug 20071h 4min

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