Channel 9 Interview: New Features for VS2008 Office Projects in SP1

Published 29 August 08 01:08 PM

I just posted an interview with Kris Makey, a Developer on the Office Client team. Here he shows us a couple new features of Office projects in Visual Studio 2008 SP1. First he demonstrates a new error logging feature that will log any end-user install errors to the Event Log making it much easier to tell what went wrong. He also shows us how you can place Winforms controls directly on document surfaces.

For more information on Office Development with Visual Studio visit the developer portal http://msdn.com/vsto and the team blog http://blogs.msdn.com/vsto/.


New Features for Visual Studio 2008 Office Projects in SP1

Enjoy!

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# funny wallpaper » Channel 9 Interview: New Features for VS2008 Office Projects in SP1 said on August 29, 2008 4:18 PM:

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# radiolistener said on September 19, 2008 9:40 PM:

Hi Beth,

It was an interesting video.  I got to study up on the SP1 features.  I should be spending some time on the VSTO blog.  Never thought of putting a button on a word document though, it could be handy though, you get all that wonderful text formatting to utilize as you fill with database or xml data.

Thanks for posting this,

John.

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About Beth Massi

Beth is a Program Manager on the Visual Studio Community Team at Microsoft and is responsible for producing and managing content for business application developers, driving community features and team participation onto MSDN Developer Centers (http://msdn.com), and helping make Visual Studio one of the best developer tools in the world. She also produces regular content on her blog (http://blogs.msdn.com/bethmassi), Channel 9, and a variety of other developer sites and magazines. As a community champion and a long-time member of the Microsoft developer community she also helps with the San Francisco East Bay .NET user group and is a frequent speaker at various software development events. Before Microsoft, she was a Senior Architect at a health care software product company and a Microsoft Solutions Architect MVP. Over the last decade she has worked on distributed applications and frameworks, web and Windows-based applications using Microsoft development tools in a variety of businesses. She loves teaching, hiking, mountain biking, and driving really fast.

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