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Web Service Webcasts in July

Four more webcasts are coming this month to talk about some of the new web service features in Orcas. Each webcast is aimed at developers and lasts 60-90 minutes.

Transactional Windows Communication Foundation Services with Juval Lowy (Level 200) Monday, July 07, 2008 10:00 AM Pacific Time

Transactions are the key to building robust, high quality service-oriented applications. Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) provides a simple, declarative transaction support for service developers, enabling you to configure parameters such as enlistment and voting, all outside the scope of your service. In addition, WCF allows client applications to create transactions and to propagate transactions across service boundaries over a variety of transports. In this webcast, we explain how to configure transaction flow at the binding, contract, and service level, local versus distributed transactions, setting of service transactions, declarative voting, and the available configurations that best fit various application scenarios.

Using Windows Workflow Foundation to Build Services with Jon Flanders (Level 300) Wednesday, July 09, 2008 10:00 AM Pacific Time

Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) is a programming model, set of tools, and runtime environment which allows you to write declarative and reactive programs for Windows operating systems. WF is part of the Microsoft .NET Runtime, and it first appeared in Microsoft .NET 3.0. Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) is also a programming model, set of tools, and a runtime that first appeared in .NET 3.0. WCF is a framework for building applications that can communicate with each other over varied network protocols. In .NET 3.5, these programming models came closer together to allow easy integration, including allowing WF instances to use WCF to communicate to remote endpoints and allowing WF instances to become the service implementation for WCF endpoints. This is accomplished by two new Activities: ReceiveActivity and SendActivity as well as a new hosting infrastructure for service endpoints. In this webcast, we look at both sides of this integration to give you an overview of how to build WF/WCF applications.

WCF Extensibility Deep Dive with Jesus Rodriguez (Level 400) Friday, July 11, 2008 10:00 AM Pacific Time

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) provides a rich messaging framework that extends beyond its capabilities for modeling and implementing services. One of the aspects where WCF really shines when compared with competitive Web services stacks is its rich extensibility model that allows developers to customize the default behavior of the framework. The better we understand the WCF extensibility model the better chance we have to make the right use of WCF in real-world applications. In this webcast, we dive deeply into the WCF extensibility model, detailing the different extensibility points of WCF subsystems such as Channels, Hosting, Security, Metadata, Encoding, and others. Specifically, we provide practical demonstrations of how custom channels, behaviors, operation invokers, authorization managers, and metadata extensions can be used to extend WCF effectively without affecting the consistency of the programming model. We also highlight a set of best practices developers should consider to address their specific scenarios properly when extending WCF.

Bringing Enterprise Data to Life with SharePoint Server and Windows Communication Foundation with Joe Klug (Level 300) Friday, July 18, 2008 10:00 AM Pacific Time

Do you want bring your business data to life in Microsoft Office Applications like Microsoft and SAP have provided in Duet? Do you want to provide your employees with a view into your business data with Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007? With Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) and the WCF Line-of-Business Adapter software development kit (SDK), it is now possible to provide this level of integration to any line-of-business (LOB) application. Whether you are using Microsoft Dynamics, SAP, JD Edwards, or any other business application, you can develop Microsoft Office business applications and SharePoint Web parts to access your business data. In this webcast, we provide an overview on using WCF for application integration with Microsoft Office client and server products. Next, we show you how you can use WCF-based adapters for integration between your LOB applications and Microsoft Office business applications. Finally, you learn how to develop Web parts that utilize custom adapters for accessing business data. Each demonstration in this webcast utilizes a custom WCF-based JD Edwards EnterpriseOne adapter.

Published Tuesday, July 01, 2008 5:00 AM by Nicholas Allen
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# WMOC#10 - Composite application guidance for WPF is out! - Service Endpoint

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