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Community Day 2011 - Fun with ASP.NET MVC, MEF and NuGet
Jun 1124To start the blog post: AWESOME! Thats what I have to say about the latest edition of Community Day 2011. I had the privilege of doing a session on ASP.NET MVC 3, MEF and NuGet, and as promised to the audience: here are the slides. For those who want to see the session, the recording can be found on Channel 9 from a previous event. Fun with ASP.NET MVC3, MEF and NuGet Community Day 2011, Mechelen, Belgium, 23/06/2011 Abstract: So you have a team of developers And a nice architecture to bui...
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MyGet now supports pushing from the command line
Jun 1101One of the work items we had opened for MyGet was the ability to push packages to a private feed from the command line. Only a few hours after our initial launch, David Fowler provided us with example code on how to implement NuGet command line pushes on the server side. An evening of coding later, I quickly hacked this into MyGet, which means that we now support pushing packages from the command line! For those that did not catch up with my blog post overload of the past week: MyGet offers ...
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Creating your own private NuGet feed: MyGet
May 1131Ever since NuGet came out, Ive been thinking about leveraging it in a corporate environment. I'veseen two NuGet server implementations appear on the Internet: the official NuGet gallery server and Phil Haacks NuGet.Server package. As these both are good, theres one thing wrong with them: you can't be lazy! You haveto do some stuff you dont always want to do, namely: configure and deploy. After discussing some ideas with my colleague Xavier Decoster, we decided its time to turn our heads into...
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Slides for my talk at MIX11: Fun with ASP.NET MVC 3, MEF and NuGet
Apr 1114As promised, here are the slides and demo code for my talk "Fun with ASP.NET MVC 3, MEF and NuGet" I presented at MIX in Las Vegas. Abstract: "So you have a team of developers And a nice architecture to build on How about making that architecture easy for everyone and getting developers up to speed quickly? Learn all about integrating the managed extensibility framework (MEF) and ASP.NET MVC with some NuGet sauce for creating loosely coupled, easy to use architectures that anyone can grasp."...
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Official Belgium TechDays 2011 Windows Phone 7 app released
Apr 1109I’m proud to announce that we (RealDolmen) have released the official Belgium TechDays 2011 Windows Phone 7 app! The official Belgium TechDays 2011 gives you the ability to browse current upcoming sessions, as well as provide LIVE feedback to the event organizers. Is the current session awesome? Let us know! Is the food too spicy? Let us know! Why am I blogging this? Well: one of the first sessions at the event will be Silverlight, Windows Phone 7, Windows Azure, jQuery, OData and RIA Servi...
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ASP.NET MVC and the Managed Extensibility Framewok on NuGet
Feb 1101If you search on my blog, theres a bunch of posts where I talk about ASP.NET MVC and MEF. And whats cool: these posts are the ones that are actually being read quite often. Im not sure about which bloggers actually update their posts like if it was software, but I dont. Old posts are outdated, thats the convention when coming to my blog. However I recently received a on of questions if I could do something with ASP.NET MVC 3 and MEF. I did, and I took things seriously. Im not sure if you kno...
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Viva, Las Vegas!
Jan 1125I have asked it last year, and Ill ask it again. One of my session proposals made it to the shortlist for MIX11. One thing left though: votes are the only currency to get my session proposal in Vegas. Heres the session abstract: Fun with ASP.NET MVC 3 and MEF So you have a team of developers? And a nice architecture to build on? How about making that architecture easy for everyone and getting developers up to speed quickly? Learn all about integrating the managed extensibility framework a...
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Tools for the lazy: Templify and NuGet
Jan 1107In this blog post, I will cover two interesting tools that, when combined, can bring great value and speed at the beginning of any new software project that has to meet standards that are to be re-used for every project. The tools? Templify and NuGet. You know the drill. Starting off with a new project usually consists of boring, repetitive tasks, often enforced by (good!) practices defined by the company you work for (or by yourself for that company). To give you an example of a project Ive...
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