Voting has opened for this year's Developer Developer Developer Day at Microsoft's UK Headquarters near Reading. You can vote for the sessions you want to see here:
http://www.developerday.co.uk/ddd/votesessions.asp
I've put forward a couple of talks:
Why do I need an Inversion of Control Container (Style: Presentation - Level: 100)
Inversion of Control (IoC) containers such as Unity Windsor and Structure Map are a hot topic in the Microsoft Development world. What are they and why is there such a buzz about them? How will they help me build better applications? Join me on a trip to an parallel universe of application architecture where I show how IoC containers at last make component oriented software development a reality.
This will be an updated version of the talk I gave at last year's DDD. I'll try and compress the 'why' and have a little more of the 'what' this time.
Using an Inversion of Control Container in a real world application (Style: Presentation - Level: 200)
Going beyond an initial introduction to IoC containers, this talk shows their use in an open source eCommerce application, Suteki Shop. I will show how the IoC container helps us write component oriented software and can significantly simplify both our architecture and code. This will include a look at some nice techniques such as generic repositories, using IoC containers with the MVC Framework and how they can help us host services.
A more in-depth look at how an IoC container helps with a real world application. I'm really looking forward to showing off the generic repository pattern and WCF integration in this one. The problem is going to be cramming everything in.
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