Contents tagged with Oslo
-
Tellago is rocking Buenos Aires Code Camp
Tellago is going to rock the Buenos Aires Code Camp tomorrow!!! Four of our architects are presenting on some of the newest Microsoft technologies. Here is a quick summary of the topics our guys are presenting on.
-
Tellago is still hiring….
Tellago's SOA practice is rapidly growing and we are still hiring. In that sense, we are looking to for Connected Systems (WCF, BizTalk, WF) experts who are passionate about building game changing solutions with the latest Microsoft technologies. You will be working alongside technology gurus like DonXml, Pablo Cibraro or Dwight Goins. If you are interested and not afraid of working with a bunch of crazy people ;)please drop me a line at jesus dot rodriguez at tellago dot com.
-
Using WCF 4.0 XAML Services in the real world: Activating WCF Services from a central repository
Declarative Services is one of the new features included in the .NET framework 4.0. In a nutshell, declarative services are WCF services modeled and implemented entirely in XAML. This feature is fundamentally enabled by extending Windows Workflow Foundation (WF) 4.0 with the capability of modeling WCF contracts using XAML. You can read more details about declarative services on the MSDN documentation. Even if you are not entirely familiar with WF as a technology, I am sure you can see the advantages of implementing services in a declarative languages.
-
SOAWorld 2009 session
Thanks to all the folks who attended to my session about WOA at SOAWorld 2009. I got a lot of interesting questions from an always sharp New York audience :). You can get the slide deck here…
-
We are still hiring...
As you might be aware, Tellago (my new venture ) has been steadily growing during last year. We are still looking for talented architects that would like to join our team. Specifically, we are have a few openings for BizTalk Architects and developers. If you are skilful with BizTalk technologies and you are crazy enough to join our team please drop me a line at jesus dot rodriguez at tellago dot com or at jobs at tellago dot com.
-
Pablo Cibraro joins Tellago
Continuing the list of recent additions to our team, we are thrilled to announce that Pablo Cibraro has joined Tellago as a Sr. Solutions Architect. Pablo is a phenomenal programmer and one of the authorities in Microsoft Connected Systems technologies. He is a Microsoft Connected Systems MVP and a member of the prestigious Connected Systems Advisors group. He regularly blogs at http://weblogs.asp.net/cibrax about WCF, Geneva, Web Services Security and many other topics.
-
Speaking at Microsoft's Connections Spring Symposium
Tomorrow and Thursday I will be speaking at the Microsoft's Connections Spring events hosted in Fort Lauderdale and Tampa respectively. The session focuses on real world ESB patterns and the Microsoft's ESB value proposition. We are going to cover technologies such as the ESB Guidance 2.0, BizTalk Server 2009, WCF 4.0 and even Windows Azure. This time, I have the honor to share the stage with Toya Lofton who is a Microsoft's SOA Technology specialists with tons of experience in real world projects.
-
Speaking at SDWest about WCF extensibility
This Friday I will be presenting a session about WCF extensibility at SDWest . I plan to go deep into a lot of the WCF internals aspects such as the channels, client-dispatcher runtime, metadata, hosting, instancing, etc. My goal is to give you as much information as possible about the different extensibility points of the WCF runtime. We are going to spend the bulk of the sessions looking at code and showing real world scenarios of the applicability of the WCF extensibility model. If you are attending SDWest and you are interested in WCF and Service Orientation in general please swing by my session and feel free to introduce yourself.
-
Extending Dublin's forwarding service with a custom WCF message filter
In a previous post we showed how to implement a basic WCF content based routing solution using the Windows Application Server (Dublin) forwarding service together with XPath message filters and filter tables. Even though XPath filters are a very appealing mechanism for implementing service brokering or composition solutions, there are a large variety of scenarios that can be addressed more efficiently using other filtering techniques. Trying to tackle this large spectrum of scenarios using a fixed set of filtering mechanisms such as XPath or XQuery is precisely one of the main challenges faced by traditional message brokering frameworks such as the infamous Enterprise Service Buses (ESBs).