August 2012
Volume 27 Number 08
August 2012 Code Downloads
August 2012
ALM Rangers - Using the Team Foundation Server Client Object Model The Visual Studio ALM Rangers introduce the Visual Studio Team Foundation Server (TFS) client object model and create the foundation for a new series of articles focused on practical guidance and common coding scenarios with TFS. |
Building HTML5 Applications - A History (API) Lesson Don’t know much about history? Clark Sell shows you how to access and manage session state using the new HTML5 History API. |
C++ - Functional-Style Programming in C++ The new C++ 11 standard greatly improves the language's suitability for functional-style programming, particularly with its support for lambdas. Learn how you can use functional-style programming in your C++ code. |
Forecast: Cloudy - Decoupling the Cloud with MEF Learn how to use the Microsoft Extensibility Framework to make a cloud deployment a little more manageable and flexible. |
Touch and Go - Viewing a Virtual World from Your Windows Phone Although we no longer believe that celestial spheres surround the Earth, that’s still a handy concept for programs that let you use a smartphone to view a virtual world. Such a program needs to determine its orientation in 3D space, and Charles Petzold explains how to accomplish this using the horizontal coordinate system. |
Windows Azure - CyberNanny: Remote Access via Distributed Components What do you do when you’re a new dad and want to keep track of your baby at home? You use the Kinect sensor, C++, Windows Azure, and local and cloud-based components to get e-mailed photos upon request, wherever you are. |
Windows Azure - Windows Azure Comes to the Rescue What do you do when marketing comes to you needing a fully functional conference registration system for a show just a month away? You leverage Windows Azure, Silverlight and Windows Phone to build an app with all the social media trimmings, as Microsoft's Mark Kromer details here. Part 2 |
Windows PowerShell - Build User-Friendly XML Interfaces with Windows PowerShell Joe Leibowitz explores a way to make reading and editing XML files easier and more convenient, even for nontechnical users, using algorithms that can parse the structure of any given file. |