Contents tagged with General Software Development
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Agile Development: Warning Signs
Alok Srivastava has an excellent post discussing agile development and areas that can put agile projects at risk. I'm currently doing clean up on an agile project gone south, and I wholeheartedly agree that the issues he points out should be warning signs if you are considering agile development. That's not to say that agile is bad by any means, just that you should think carefully before you make the jump, especially if your project will have the issues Alok mentions:
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Making the Possible More Impossible
Jared Parsons thought it would be nice if we could have a ReadOnlyList object in our generic template instead of IEnumerable. I think that's an excellent idea, so a few minor modifications and we have an even better solution, not requiring the generic constraint TWrite : TRead:
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Making the Possible Impossible
Have you ever gone to a restraunt with a menu that was just too big? Every once and a while I wind up at a place with a huge menu and it takes forever to choose what kind of food I'm going to eat. That's not a problem when I go to a steak house. When I go to a steak house, I know exactly what I want. A rib-eye medium well with a side of mashed potatoes. Removing options always makes it easier to choose the right thing.
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Publish / Subscribe with WCF
I'm working on a series of articles about building an ESB on your own.
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Fear the Cloud
If you are considering using "cloud services," you should read this:
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Don't Mix Lambda Expressions and Using Statements
Lambda expressions are really cool, but they present some interesting problems because they aren't really inline code blocks like they appear:
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My First Microsoft Interview
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Protocol Buffers: Google vs. XML
"Google (or at least some part of it) has now weighed in on the whole XML discussion with the recent release of their "Protocol Buffers" implementation, and, quite naturally, the debates have begun, with all the carefully-weighed logic, respectful discourse, and reasoned analysis that we've come to expect and enjoy from this industry.
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Behind Youtube
Cuong Do on YouTube's infrastructure. Pretty interesting:
http://blip.tv/file/1069718/ -
Events are your Friend
"Imagine trying to build a desktop application without events. How would you make a button click do what you want? One way would be to open the Button source code and add the code directly. That has approach has obvious problems, not the least of which is that the behavior of the button click will vary from button to button..."