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Where can I find the version of Visual Studio I need?

It came to my attention today that some customers are finding it hard to find the released version of Visual Studio that supports the just-released .NET Framework 3.0. Therefore, I figured it might be useful to walk through the various versions available today in chronological order and provide links to the download pages that I helped create and publish.

1)    Visual Studio 2005 ("Whidbey):

Dev Tools (available for download):

·         Visual Studio 2005 Professional Edition 90-day Trial

·         Visual Studio 2005 Team Suite 180-Day Trial

·         Visual Studio 2005 Team Foundation Server Trial Edition

·         Visual Studio Express Editions

 Framework:

·         .NET Framework 2.0

 2)    Visual Studio 2005 Extensions for .NET Framework 3.0 (codenamed “Fidalgo) : These tools are provided as an early preview of technology being considered for the Orcas release of Visual Studio. These tools are not supported by Microsoft but provided as is to enable early adoption of the .NET Framework 3.0 platform. Users will be expected to upgrade to the Visual Studio Orcas release when that becomes commercially available.

Dev Tools (available for download):

·         Visual Studio 2005 Extensions for .NET Framework 3.0, November 2006 CTP

 Framework:

·         .NET Framework 3.0 Bootstrapper

 

 3) Visual Studio Code Name “Orcas”: 

·         September 2006 CTP: first VPC image release of our September CTP. Watch for more posts on how we created it and what the feedback has been so far.

·          October 2006 CTP: differencing disk released with more features that were checked in since the September release.

Maybe this clarifies things a little and folks can find the Visual Studio bits that they are looking to continue development.

 

 

Published Thursday, November 09, 2006 1:48 PM by kavithar

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# re: Where can I find the version of Visual Studio I need? @ Wednesday, November 29, 2006 11:42 PM

Hi Kavitha,

good to see you blogging on this topic. It's been a while since I have been playing with cutting edge Visual Studio bits...

Speaking of the new CTP releases: Are the September and October releases an indicator that Microsoft (DevDiv) is using a more incremental approach to SW development and release management? A ka an iterative release of incrementally increased functionality each month? It would be very interesting to see such concepts applied to large commercial products of this scale...

Thanks, Thomas.

tlausser

# re: Where can I find the version of Visual Studio I need? @ Thursday, November 30, 2006 2:33 PM

Hello Thomas,

You are right! We started down this path towards the end of Whidbey and have racked it up a notch for the Orcas release. The idea is to get point-in-time builds out to customers so that we can get feedback in time to plough it back into the product. We are balancing this need with VPC images to ensure that customers can do this without hosing their machines. This approach has been working really well both for us and our customers and I can only see it getting better as we move forward.

Cheers,

Kavitha

kavithar

# re: Where can I find the version of Visual Studio I need? @ Thursday, November 30, 2006 9:31 PM

Very exciting! I think this represents a significant departure from traditional waterfall type project management. At the Agile 2006 conference, Mary Poppendieck characterized the difference between agile and waterfall processes as feedback-driven vs. forecast-driven. Through monthly CTP releases, you can incorporate feedback (similar to what Dr. Watson did for quality feedback from the install base).

The idea to use Virtual Machine images as form of application isolation for such frequent releases is also very clever. This is inline with a direction we are also actively pursuing at Citrix: Using various levels of virtualization for application delivery.

BTW: Orcas feature list looks quite impressive already!

-T

tlausser

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