I’m invited to speak at dotNed Saturday, the Dutch .NET community event.
My session, is called “Serious Request, Azure als schaalbaar platform” and I’ll be talking about my experiences using Azure to build a high available, secure and scalable platform for digital donations. This platform is used during “3FM Serious Request”, the annual charity event organized by the Dutch radio station 3FM for the Dutch Red Cross.
This post will be about a new sample of using “Sandboxable”.
We will walk through the steps to create a Microsoft Dynamics CRM plug-in that on deletion of any record, stores the deleted data as a file on Azure blob storage.
A while back I've introduced Sandboxable. It's a means to use NuGet packages that normally are not available for code that runs with Partial Trust.
In this post, we will walk through the steps to create a Microsoft Dynamics CRM plug-in that will add a message to an Azure queue.
I would like to introduce to you Winvision’s first open source project: Sandboxable.
Sandboxable enables your project to utilize functionality provided by other (Microsoft) libraries that normally are not available in a Partial Trust environment like the Microsoft Dynamics CRM sandbox process.
The project offers modified NuGet packages that will run with Partial Trust.
This week I’ll be attending the Microsoft Build 2016 conference in San Francisco.
Lots of news to be expected for developers covering the many technologies Microsoft is putting on the market.
Recently I got certified by Microsoft as Solutions Developer for the Windows Universal Platform by taking two exams that are currently in beta. Because the exams are in beta there is not much guidance to be found online. I noticed during the exams I was being tested on skills not mentioned on the Microsoft Learning web site.
In this post I’ll cover these differences and how I prepared for the exams so it’ll be easier for you to get certified.