TWC9: New Channel9 Preview, Power Tools, MVC 3 Preview 1, Laser Graffiti
- Posted: Jul 30, 2010 at 5:58 PM
- 30,886 Views
- 6 Comments
Download
How do I download the videos?
- To download, right click the file type you would like and pick “Save target as…” or “Save link as…”
Why should I download videos from Channel9?
- It's an easy way to save the videos you like locally.
- You can save the videos in order to watch them offline.
- If all you want is to hear the audio, you can download the MP3!
Which version should I choose?
- If you want to view the video on your PC, Xbox or Media Center, download the High Quality WMV file (this is the highest quality version we have available).
- If you'd like a lower bitrate version, to reduce the download time or cost, then choose the Medium Quality WMV file.
- If you have a Zune, WP7, iPhone, iPad, or iPod device, choose the low or medium MP4 file.
- If you just want to hear the audio of the video, choose the MP3 file.
Right click “Save as…”
- High Quality WMV (PC, Xbox, MCE)
- MP3 (Audio only)
- MP4 (iPod, Zune HD)
- Mid Quality WMV (Lo-band, Mobile)
This Week on Channel 9, Dan and Brian get together to discuss the week's top developer news, including:
Picks of the week!
- Channel 9 Team - The public preview version of the new version of Channel 9 is up, file file bugs or vote up/down suggestions and hear from Mike Sampson aka "Sampy" discuss how it all works
- Scott Guthrie - ASP.NET MVC 3 Preview 1 and use Eilon Lipton's solution converter to convert MVC 2 apps to MVC 3
- Jason Zander - Updated Productivity Power Tools Now Available - a MUST HAVE feature for developers
- Lisa Feigenbaum - VS 2010 Keyboard Shortcuts now available, via Greg Duncan
- Maarten Balliauw - A Quick Tour of "Project Houston" - An browser tool to manage SQL Azure databases
- Rene Schulte - How to save, load, and iterate pictures on Windows Phone 7
- Yochay Kiriaty - Windows Phone 7 Application Execution Model and how "tombstoning" works
- Andre Vrignaud - Updated PDF document of the Windows Phone 7 UI & Design Interaction Guidelines and 28 layered Photoshop templates
- David Anson - Diff'ing a Windows Phone CTP Charting sample versus the Beta to see what changed
- Adam Kinney - Dissecting the IE9 Fish Tank Demo - Part 1
Picks of the week!
- Brian's pick: Brian Harry goes through a slew of useful updates and bug fixes coming for TFS 2010
- Dan's pick: Coding4Fun - Jeremiah Morrill - Building the Laser Graffiti System shown at PDC
Comments Closed
Comments have been closed since this content was published more than 30 days ago, but if you'd like to continue the conversation,
please create a new thread in our Forums,
or
Contact Us and let us know.
Follow the Discussion
The team who wrote the PowerTools should be given a raise! That's all I have to say about that!
I agree that the Power Tools are great, but there still are many features that I wish were either added to Visual Studio or to the Power Tools package. Non-MRU based document switching is at the top of that list for me and for many others!
At 7:20 "That's true, we do have emacs key bindings." Please elaborate. I don't see that in the Power Tools.
That's actually been in Visual Studio 2005/2008, although I don't see it as an option for 2010, you could always export the settings from 2008 and import back in 2010.
To do it, go to Tools...Options...Environment...Keyboard... and select the "Apply the following additional keyboard mapping scheme:" and in the dropdown, select Emacs.
I don't see that as one of the workarounds mentioned on Connect, so forgive me if I'm skeptical. Maybe I'll try to find the time to attempt it.
it's very cool
Remove this comment
Remove this thread
close