Stories

http://www.meetwindowsazure.com/Stories

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

How to: Consume an OData Service for Windows Phone

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg521145$v=vs.92$.aspx

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Articles – Chief Learning Officer, Solutions for Enterprise Productivity

http://clomedia.com/

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Large collection of Free Microsoft eBooks for you, including: SharePoint, Visual Studio, Windows Phone, Windows 8, Office 365, Office 2010, SQL Server 2012, Azure, and more. – Microsoft SMS

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/mssmallbiz/archive/2012/07/27/10334262.aspx

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Animate Household Objects With Microsoft’s KinEtre

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Microsoft opens Office and SharePoint up to web developers

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Windows Azure and Office 365!

http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2012/07/26/windows-azure-and-office-365.aspx

“Last week’s Beta release of Microsoft Office 365 and SharePoint introduced several great enhancements, including a bunch of developer improvements. Developers can now extend SharePoint by creating web apps using ASP.NET (both ASP.NET Web Forms and now ASP.NET MVC), as well as extend SharePoint by authoring custom workflows using the new Workflow Framework in .NET 4.5.

Even better, the web and workflow apps that developers create to extend SharePoint can now be hosted on Windows Azure. We are delivering end-to-end support across Office 365 and Windows Azure that makes it super easy to securely package up and deploy these solutions.

Developing Windows Azure Web Sites Integrated with Office 365

Last month we released a major update to Windows Azure. One of the new services introduced with that release was a capability we call Windows Azure Web Sites – which enables developers to quickly and easily deploy web apps to Windows Azure. With the new Office, SharePoint Server 2013 and Office 365 Preview released last week, developers can now create apps for Office and SharePoint and host them on Windows Azure.

You can now use any version of ASP.NET (including ASP.NET Web Forms, ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET Web Pages) to create apps for SharePoint, and authenticate and integrate them with Office 365 using OAuth 2 and Windows Azure Active Directory. This enables you to securely create/read/update data stored within SharePoint, and integrate with the rich data and document repositories in Office 365.

In addition to enabling developers to host these web apps on their own with Windows Azure, the new version of Office 365 and SharePoint also now enable developers to package and upload custom web apps to Office 365. End users can then browse these apps within the new Office and SharePoint Store available within Office 365 and choose to install them for their SharePoint solutions. Doing so will cause Office 365 to automatically deploy and provision a copy of the app as a Windows Azure Web Site, and Office 365 will then manage it on behalf of the end-customer who installed it. This provides a really compelling way for developers to create and distribute custom web apps that extend SharePoint to customers, and optionally monetize these solutions through the Store.

You can learn more about how to build these solutions as well as the new cloud app model for Office and SharePoint here, and more about how to build apps for SharePoint here. Developing Windows Azure Workflows Integrated with Office 365

The new version of SharePoint also now enables developers to execute custom .NET 4.5 Workflows in response to SharePoint actions (for example: an end user uploading a document, or modifying items within a SharePoint list). The introduction of .NET 4.5 Workflows enables SharePoint workflows that are more: expressive: by introducing stages and looping, and taking advantage of .NET 4.5 flowchart workflows connected: by supporting the ability to call REST and OData web services, as well as ASP.NET Web API endpoints unbounded: by running workflows outside of the SharePoint server in a robust, scalable, and consistent workflow host

With this month’s Office 365 Preview, developers can now easily author and upload workflows to their SharePoint solutions. Office 365 now uses a new Windows Azure Workflow service to automatically execute these within Windows Azure. Developers and Office 365 customers do not have to setup anything within Windows Azure to enable this (nor even have a Windows Azure account) – as the end-to-end integration is provided automatically by Office 365 and Windows Azure.

You can author these workflows using either the Office SharePoint Designer or from within Visual Studio 2012. In the Office SharePoint Designer, users will be able to build .NET 4.5 workflows either through a visual designer:

Or within a text view (similar to the Outlook Rules wizard):

Developers can use the new Workflow designer and Office Developer Tooling within Visual Studio 2012:

The workflow support provides a really easy way to customize the behavior of actions within SharePoint, and run this custom logic within Windows Azure. All of this can be done without the developer or IT Professional customizing SharePoint having to deploy any app themselves (nor even sign-up for a Windows Azure account – Office 365 takes care of it all). Because workflows can also now make asynchronous REST and OData calls within a workflow, it is also now really easy to author workflows that call custom functionality and services you might have running in Windows Azure (for example: a service written using ASP.NET Web API) and integrate that data or logic with your SharePoint solution. Summary

This summer’s updates of Windows Azure and Office 365 provide a wealth of new cloud capabilities. You can use each of the services independently, or now take advantage of them together to develop even more compelling end-to-end solutions. Visit the Office Developer Center to learn more and get started today.

Hope this helps,

Scott

P.S. In addition to blogging, I use Twitter to-do quick posts and share links. My Twitter handle is: @scottgu”

-Sent from Weave for Windows Phone 7

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Graph

http://www.yworks.com/en/products_yfileswpf_about.html

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Kinect Toolbox update turns hand gestures into mouse input, physical contact into distant memory!

http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/01/kinect-toolbox-update-turns-hand-gestures-into-mouse-input/

“Using Microsoft’s Kinect to replace a mouse is often considered the Holy Grail of developers; there have been hacks and other tricks to get it working well before Kinect for Windows was even an option. A lead Technical Evangelist for Microsoft in France, David Catuhe, has just provided a less makeshift approach. The 1.2 update to his Kinect Toolbox side project introduces hooks to control the mouse outright, including ‘magnetic’ control to draw the mouse from its original position. To help keep the newly fashioned input (among other gestures) under control, Catuhe has also taken advantage of the SDK 1.5 release to check that the would-be hand-waver is sitting and staring at the Kinect before accepting any input. The open-source Windows software is available to grab for experimentation today, so if you think hands-free belongs as much on the PC desktop as in a car, you now have a ready-made way to make the dream a reality… at least, until you have to type.

Filed under: Peripherals, Software

Kinect Toolbox update turns hand gestures into mouse input, physical contact into distant memory originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 03:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments”

-Sent from Weave for Windows Phone 7

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

NeatStreets now available for Windows Phone to help keep Australia and New Zealand clean!

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/wmexperts/~3/FEAbXMTkxwg/story01.htm

“Orange Stripes has released a NeatStreets app for Windows Phone. NeatStreets is a service available for those who reside in Australia (website) and New Zealand (website), which enables residents to report on any issues with litter, graffiti, sanitation, footpaths, roads, streetlights, and more. These reports are forwarded to the authorities who will be able to act on the compiled information.

We have a similar Windows Phone app here in the UK, called Love Clean Streets, which pretty much shares the same functionality as NeatStreets. The services are a great way for Windows Phone users to help keep local environments clean and to alert local authorities to anything that’s considered an issue. NeatStreets is a simple, yet effective, app which can be utilised wherever the user may be located.

read more”

-Sent from Weave for Windows Phone 7

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment