Wednesday, January 30 2008 - Screencasts
Great news! When I attended and spoke at the Microsoft SOA & Business Process Conference I was informed that they were recording all sessions to be included in a DVD of the event which would be sent out to those who had attended. Great, wonderful, but not a lot of use to my blog readers. Well shortly there after I received a request from the TechNet team to include my presentation as part of the "Best Of" from event online. I happily agreed, and am happy to report that the best of the Microsoft SOA & Business Process Conference can now be found on TechNet, and that my presentation on Building HIPAA solutions with BizTalk Server 2006 R2 is amongst them. Incidentally apparently I received a 5 of 5 rating during the conference, I thank the attendees for being so easy on me.
This talk is actually very relevant to anyone interested in EDI for BizTalk Server 2006 R2 as the HIPAA specific pieces are few. It is a good introductory talk, it is not a deep internals talk but it does cover the configuration and setup of EDI/HIPAA in R2 in some depth. If you're interested in this topic and can't get to an event where I'm speaking, this is a nice alternative.
Sunday, January 27 2008 - Screencasts
I've written about Model View Presenter (MVP) several times before, once after hearing a talk and learning about the pattern, and again when I learned about extension methods.
Today I bring you a screencast on Model View Presenter using Visual Studio 2008 and extension methods. This is my second screencast, and I've upgraded my microphone to a professional rig thanks to my father to improve the audio.
Click here to watch the screencast.
Thursday, September 27 2007 - Screencasts
I've spent a lot of time this summer traveling to various events and presenting my talk "Introduction to C# 3.0" to people throughout the South Central area of the United States. Well, it pains me to say I'm but one man, and there are way way way way to many of you to reach through this manual process. Fortunately for me, there are technological solutions to this problem : The Internet!
I've spent some time today recording my first of what I hope to be several webcasts. These webcasts are made possible through the generation gift of a Camtasia license from TechSmith. I've been a fan of Camtasia for many years, and the latest versions are a joy to work with.
All of that said, following this link to the Land of Oz and an Introduction to C# 3.0.