Advertisement
Promo

Become a member of the ZDNet UK community

Adrian Bridgwater

View blog's RSS Feed

Software application development

This blog is intended to provoke discussion and exchange between like minded software application developers, engineers, architects, project managers - and keen hobbyists too.

Monday 18 May 2009, 8:09 AM

Visual Studio 2010 Beta 1 now available to MSDN developers

Posted by Adrian Bridgwater

This weekend saw a blog post go up by Microsoft tools guru Jihad Dannawi who detailed the news that Monday May 18th is the launch day for Visual Studio 2010 Beta 1 Professional, Suite and Team Foundation Server editions to MSDN subscribers. The download will also be available to the general public this coming Wednesday May 20th.

IMAGE DESCRIPTION'
Image: Microsoft Visual Studio® 2010 First Look

The launch of this tools suite comes some five months after I interviewed Microsoft’s Jason Zander and Matt Carter for ZDNet.co.uk about the forthcoming release, which has been expected to feature a set of product enhancements focused on software developer needs arising from trends such as virtualisation, cloud computing and parallelism.

As expected, Microsoft is talking volubly on what it calls “democratisation” of the application lifecycle management process with this new product. Essentially, the company is aiming to delivers new capabilities for everyone on a project, including architects, developers, project managers and testers.

Jason Zander’s own blog specifies that as well as addressing much needed performance considerations, the company has taken direct feedback on the product’s presentation and functionality. Zander enthuses, “You spoke loudly and clearly that you didn’t like the triangle outline mode. Based on this feedback, the team actually changed this feature in mid-flight during Beta 1 to reflect your feedback: no more triangles!!”

Microsoft says that with the Visual Studio partner ecosystem, developers will now be able to work with IBM DB2 and Oracle databases in addition to Microsoft SQL Server databases. The company also states that with a regard to multi-core software development, they are aiming to simplify parallel programming so that both native- and managed-code developers can productively build applications.

From this point forward, developer speculation and interest may now gather for the next enhancements to the .NET Framework 4.0 and Windows Server "Dublin", which will reputedly include new workflow models, a new visual designer and better scalability while broadening Internet Information Services (IIS) to provide a standard host for applications that use workflow or communications.

Comments on this post

Adrian Bridgwater

This member is ranked #4 in our top 100

  • Adrian Bridgwater
  • Applications Development, London, UK
  • Member since: July 2007

Site Activity Rating 6

CoreTechs

Contacts' Latest Discussions

Number of Tracked Discussions: 2,090

ator1940 ator1940

AOL's Steve Case

Wednesday 23 December 2009, 12:31 PM

1 comment
ator1940 ator1940

Plurk holding Microsoft's feet to...

Tuesday 22 December 2009, 3:00 PM

3 comments
manek manek

Why don't people delete old emails?

Thursday 17 December 2009, 6:26 PM

8 comments

Contacts' Latest Blogs

Number of Contacts Blogs: 5

Avatar manek

EMC brings tiers to the storage party

Wednesday 16 December 2009, 9:36 AM

0 comments
Avatar Karen Friar

HP workers set dates for strikes

Thursday 3 December 2009, 7:57 PM

1 comment

Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters