Email Alerts
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Microsoft ready to grow lifecycle tool space
As Microsoft ushered Visual Studio 2005 and SQL Server 2005 out the door this week, the company reported growth in revenue, the.NET community and its lists of SQL and VS partners. That positions the company well as it enters the lifecycle tools marke... Article
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Microsoft SQL Server 2005: The next generation
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer called the launch of SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005, and BizTalk 2006 the start of the next generation of Microsoft's 'broad applications platform.' Article
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Microsoft launches Visual Studio 2005, including team version and VB.NET updates
Long awaited, Microsoft's Team Server supports modeling and testing and is said to improve development team members' ability to collaborate. Article
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Visual Basic 2005: Where to get started
Author Sean Campbell discusses VB2005 and key areas of interest for developers ready to roll with the new tools set. Tip
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Visual Studio 2005 launched - Now it is time to really get to work
The announcement of Visual Studio 2005 heralds the start of .NET Framework 2.0 programming in earnest. Article
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Chrome extends Pascal to the .NET platform
RemObjects' Chrome for Visual Studio extends Object Pascal programming to Visual Studio .NET 2003 and 2005. Article
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Visual C# 2005 Learning Guide
Ready to try your coding skills with Visual C#? There's no better time than now with the recent release of Visual C# 2005. No matter whether you're coming from another Microsoft language or even Java, this learning guide provides a wealth of resource... Learning Guide
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'My' extensions turbocharge new VB tool set
A brief run-down on what the new do-it-all namespace does can help you get moving with VB2005 applications. Tip
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SQL Server 2005 reaches RTM
Microsoft's SQL Server 2005 and Visual Studio 2005 were released to manufacturing today. The new database server is poised to make real inroads in the large enterprise market. Article
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Expert asks if Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 is too feature rich
Author Charles Petzold last week decried Visual Studio's "insistence on writing code" for developers in a speech entitled "Does Visual Studio Rot the Mind?" to the NYC .NET developers group. Article