I attended Microsoft Techdays 2010 today and not surprisingly the keynote speech concentrated on Azure, Microsoft’s cloud offering. The most impressive part was how well the presenter coped with the “unknown application error” that repeatedly popped up as he tried to publish an application from Visual Studio to Azure. The low point was undoubtedly an exclusive view of a new Intel multi-core processor which was made moderately more exciting when they removed the heat sync so we could see the processor itself.
A personal favourite was the virtualisation demo that showed how it is possible to run Windows XP nodes with IE 6 in your data centre accessible for your user base via a browser. The advantage of such a setup is of course that you can upgrade your PC base to Windows 7 and IE8 without loosing access to all your legacy applications. Unquestionably impressive, but if Microsoft had tried a bit harder to stick to standards a few years ago, those old applications wouldn’t require virtualising in the first place.
I then attended a session on Internet Explorer 9, which although interesting was actually mainly about IE 8 as someone higher up the command chain had decided that IE9 was not yet ready for public viewing, at least not at Techdays 2010. Surprisingly, there was very little said about security other than the anti-phishing functionality. The main thrust of the session was an admission that when it came to the Java Script engine, IE was far behind its rivals and this is where a lot of the work on IE 9 is going. Most encouragingly, the presenter also admitted that Microsoft failure to stick to standards in the past had been a mistake and this wouldn’t be the approach in future.
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