Azure DevOps, Scrum, & .NET Software Leadership and Consulting Services

Introducing Slide Speaker: Videos with Voice-over from your PowerPoint and Google Slides Presentations

Speaking at DevTeach Ottawa: November 2 through November 4, 2011


Some more news.  I’ll be speaking at DevTeach in Ottawa, ON.  The schedule isn’t 100% set in stone yet but the conference runs from 11/2/2011 through 11/4/2011 and I’ll be giving two talks.

Here are the abstracts:

Too Slow: Use VS2010 Profiling & Load Testing to Manage Performance Issues

You thought you knew how to write fast code but your app just doesn’t perform. Massive servers and still only 20 concurrent users? What is going wrong? You can find out by using Visual Studio 2010’s code profiling features.

Want to know how many users your app can currently support? Want to know how many users it takes to crush your servers? Or perhaps you want to know why the app breaks under load? Was it memory? Disk usage? Networking? IIS? SQL Server? You can use Visual Studio’s load testing features to figure that out.

In this session, Ben will show you how to use these features to take a poorly performing application and make it fast. He’ll also talk about what you should be doing to find and stop performance problems before they happen by using Team Foundation Server automated builds and reporting.

Design Patterns for Model-View-ViewModel Unit Testing & Testability

MVVM is a great architecture that really lets you write well unit tested applications. In this session, Ben will talk about his experiences over the last year leading the development of a Silverlight MVVM-based application. From the architectural havoc of the async calls to layering your application to de-coupling your ViewModel from your WCF and data access code – you’ll learn from his mistakes and hear how to implement it all using unit tests with great code coverage. The goal of this session is to answer not only just “what should I test and how do I do it?” but also to answer “what’s worth testing?” in your WPF, Silverlight, and WP7 applications. Along the way, you can expect to hear a lot about interface-driven programming, design-for-testability, Dependency Injection, the Adapter and Repository patterns, and ViewModel best practices.

-Ben

SUBSCRIBE TO THE BLOG


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.