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Visual Basic for Windows Phone!

"Surprise!" Rick Claus reels back in amazement from the flame-burst of a teppanyaki onion volcano

It Makes Sense…

It makes sense, after all:

  • You can develop Silverlight applications in Visual Basic.
  • You can developer Windows Phone 7 apps in Silverlight.
  • Why can’t you develop Windows Phone 7 Silverlight apps in Visual Basic?

That’s the question a number of developers have been asking, as Brandon Watson’s earlier tweet hinted:

Brandon Watson's tweet: "Anyone care to guess what the biggest request from the #wp7dev community has been for the #wp7 dev tools and platform?

Here’s What You Get

And we’re now one step closer to that becoming real. Today on the Windows Phone Developer Blog, Brandon announced the availability of Visual Basic CTP (that’s “Community Technology Preview”) for Windows Phone Developer Tools.

With it, you get:

  • Visual Basic application templates for Windows Phone 7 Silverlight apps
  • UI designer support for Visual Basic
  • Emulator and phone support for Visual Basic
  • and of course, Intellisense support for Visual Basic

In short, everything the Visual Basic developer needs to start writing Silverlight apps for WP7.

And Now, the Fine Print

"Warning" icon

Remember, unlike the C# tools, which have been Released to Manufacturing, Visual Basic for Windows Phone is CTP, and remember that the “P” stands for “Preview” and that CTP comes before Beta.

Be advised that:

  • As a Community Technology Preview, this is an early access program to a work in progress. It’s meant for you to try out and give us feedback about it. It is not a final implementation, and as such, you should expect to use it to write apps that are ready for Marketplace.
  • There’s no go-live license for this CTP. That means you can’t use this particular version to build apps for commercial release. It’s not ready for prime time yet!
  • You need Visual Studio 2010 Pro, Premium or Ultimate. Sorry, but Visual Studio Express for Windows Phone isn’t going to work with this version. If you’re really itching to try writing VB apps for WP7, Brandon suggests downloading a trial version of Visual Studio Pro.
  • Visual Basic for Windows Phone is for writing Silverlight apps only. If you want to write XNA-based games and apps, you have to do it in C#.

Why Visual Basic?

Cover of Rodney Dangerfield's "No Respect" albumVisual Basic takes a lot of heat from developers, both within and outside the Microsoft developer community. Perhaps it’s because it’s derived from BASIC, back when the name was an acronym and the “B” stood for Beginner’s. It could also be that there is a history of some really atrocious code being written in VB. I think it’s because it brought the power of programming to everyone, which annoys people who are deeply invested in keeping programming a sort of “high priesthood”, a club where not everyone can be a member.

That’s snobbery, and it’s also a shame. One of the purposes of languages like Visual Basic is that it opened the world of programming to “domain experts” – people who know the ins and outs of the fields or businesses for which applications are written. People who’ll actually have to use those applications. Languages like Visual Basic empower these people who have the domain knowledge take their ideas and turn them into apps without having to always “outsource” it to one of us. They capture the best parts of the “DIY” spirit, and we should be encouraging the people who use them, not denigrating them for using a “toy”.

I think of this as the antithesis of programming for the Esteemed Competition’s mobile platforms, whether you’ve opted for the wide open but fragmented one, or the more closed one where you have to chase pointers, write method declarations twice and are a barely-tolerated “fourth party developer”. Phone development with Visual Basic makes it easy for anyone with an idea and the will to work – but not the programming background – to dive in and start seeing results quickly.

I think that’s a good thing.

Download Visual Basic CTP for Windows Phone

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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Don’t Just Get Ready…Get Microsoft Platform Ready!

Microsoft Platform Ready: Your chance to shine

If you write applications that live on one or more of the following Microsoft platforms:Microsoft product logos: Windows Phone, Windows Azure, Windows Server 2008 R2, SharePoint 2010, SQL Server 2008, Office, Dynamics CRM, Windows 7, Exchange Server 2010

  • Windows 7
  • Windows Server 2008 R2
  • Windows Azure
  • SQL Server 2008 R2
  • SharePoint 2010
  • Office 2010
  • Exchange Server 2010
  • Dynamics CRM 2011

…then you should get them Microsoft Platform Ready!

What is Microsoft Platform Ready?

Microsoft Platform Ready is a program to help you bring your applications from the initial idea to working software that people buy by giving you what you need to get through three major phases:

  1. Development: We’ll provide you with the training and documentation resources to help ensure that your applications are making the most out of the Microsoft platforms you’re building them on.
  2. Testing: You’ll get resources and tools to test your applications to help confirm that they’re running as best they can on the platforms you’re building them on. Once successfully tested, your app is “logo certified” for its platforms, and you can proudly show that logo, which tells your customers, “yes, it really works!”
  3. Marketing: Market your applications more effectively with our marketing toolkits, templates for presentations and email, and get registered in Pinpoint, our database of applications and software companies, where customers in need of software search.

By bringing your applications to Microsoft Platform Ready, you’re:

  • Accessing the latest information on how to best take advantage of our platforms
  • Ensuring that they run properly on our platforms
  • Getting “logo certified”
  • Taking advantage of our marketing tools and resources and becoming more “findable”

Oh yes! It's FREE!

…and yes, it’s free!

A Quick Look at the Dashboard

You move your applications through these phases using Microsoft Platform Ready’s dashboard. For example, here’s a screenshot of my dashboard with an application running on Windows 7 highlighted. I’ve developed it, and it’s now ready to move to testing:

Screenshot: Platform Ready dashboard showing the checklist for a Windows 7 application

For applications that use more than one platform – say, the one below, a web app that uses both Azure and SQL Server 2008 R2 – you bring each platform through the phases. In this case, I’m ready to bring the Azure and SQL Server components to the testing phase:

Screenshot: Platform Ready dashboard showing checklist for an application based on Windows Azure and SQL Server 2008 R2

Get Fast-Tracked Through Microsoft Platform Ready Before October 1st!

Photo of speeding subway train: "Fast-track your applications before October 1st!"

Normally, bringing your application through Microsoft Platform Ready requires going through the “Test” phase, which involves downloading our test harness and then running your application through it. However, for the time leading up to October 1st, if you’ve already tested your applications using your own testing and QA processes and have made sure that they run on our platforms, you’ve done everything you need to get past the testing phase.

If you’ve got an application that you want logo certified and want customers to find – and you want to do it quickly – take advantage of this opportunity to “fast-track” your application through Microsoft Platform Ready.

What Do You Need?

Aside from an application, you need a Windows Live ID to sign up for Microsoft Platform Ready. Like the Microsoft Platform Ready program, Windows Live IDs are free.

A Handy Tip About Windows Live IDs

It’s a good idea to have at least two separate Windows Live IDs:

  1. One for your current job: for accessing MSDN, Platform Ready, Office Live for work documents, and other Windows Live services you use in your job.
  2. One for your life: for accessing Xbox Live, your private email, Office Live for your personal stuff, and other Windows Live services you use when you’re “off the clock”.

The reason for this arrangement: at work, you can get moved to other projects or change jobs, requiring you to hand over access to services like MSDN and Platform Ready to other people. Having a separate job-related Live ID makes it simple to hand over that access without also handing over your personal stuff (and especially the bragging rights from your Xbox Live Gamerscore!).

Sign up for Microsoft Platform Ready!

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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Join the “Ignite Your Coding” LinkedIn Group!

Banner: Ignite Your Coding LinkedIn group

The Ignite Your Coding LinkedIn group is a place for Canadian Developers to find out the latest tech news, see what’s happening in the world of Microsoft and other platforms, make announcements, exchange ideas and get to know other Canadian developers. Although we folks at Microsoft Canada’s Developer and Platform Evangelism team run the LinkedIn group, it’s open to all, no matter what platform you develop for. It’s a a place for all Canadian developers to connect, network, and learn in order to help them grow and be successful in their careers regardless of the tools or platform they use.

Let me say that again: the Ignite Your Coding LinkedIn group is for all Canadian developers, not just Microsoft ones. (And we’re not too fussy about the “Canadian” part, either.)

For those of you interested in certain niches of development, the Ignite Your Coding Linked group has subgroups as well:

  • Mobile Development: for developers and designers building apps for all mobile platforms – not just Windows Phone 7, but also Android, BlackBerry, iPhone, whatever!
  • Windows Development: for developers and designers building applications for Windows.

Join Ignite Your Coding, participate and reap the benefits!

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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“The iPhone of Night Clubs”

the iphone of night clubsFound via The High Definite.

This article also appears in The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century.

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Half Off Manning’s SharePoint Books Today (Sept. 22)

Manning's SharePoint books: SharePoint 2010 Site Owner's Manual, SharePoint 2010 Web Parts in Action, SharePoint 2007 Developer's Guide to the Business Data Catalog and SharePoint 2010 Workflows in Action

Today (Wednesday, September 22) Manning’s offering their SharePoint books, in both electronic and dead-tree form, at half price:

Just enter the promo code dotd0922 in the Promotional Code box when you check out at manning.com.

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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Fredericton .NET User Group Meeting Tonight (Sept. 22)

fredericton .net user groupCreative Commons photo by Sean McGrath. Click the photo to see the original.

The Fredericton .NET User Group is meeting tonight! Tonight’s presentation topic is the Open Data Protocol, as presented by Andrew Trevors of SwiftRadius.

For more about the Fredericton .NET User Group and tonight’s meeting, see my earlier posting.

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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This Saturday: SharePoint Saturday in Vancouver

sharepoint saturday vancouverCreative Commons photo by Jason V. Click the photo to see it on its original page.

Don’t forget that this Saturday, September 25th, is the first SharePoint Saturday in Vancouver!

It’s a FREE public event, and it’s a chance for people in the Vancouver area to dive into SharePoint. It promises to be an educational, informative and lively day filled with sessions from respected SharePoint professionals and MVPs, covering a wide variety of SharePoint-oriented topics.

For more details, see my earlier blog entry on SharePoint Saturday Vancouver as well as the SharePoint Saturday Vancouver site and the registration page.

Thanks to Yaroslav Pentsarskyy for letting me know about this event!

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.