Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Tampa CodeCamp Presentations

On November 13, 2010, I presented 2 sessions at Tampa Code Camp:

1) Powershell for Developers - In this session we will look at the a main use cases for developer usage of PowerShell. An overview of the PowerShell development model will be provided. This presentation is similar to last year's presentation by Chad Miller with more emphasis to .NET developers.

Link to Presentation & Demo: COMING SOON


2) Intro to Open Data Protocol (OData) - In this session, we will provide an overview of OData and how to use .NET4 on consuming and creating an OData endpoint and etc. The Open Data Protocol (OData) applies web technologies such as HTTP, AtomPub and JSON to enable a wide range of data sources to be exposed on the web in a simple, secure and interoperable way.

Link to Presentation & Demo: COMING SOON

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Tampa PowerShell Presentation

On May 13th, 2010, I presented PowerShell Scripting for IT Professionals, which is about Basics of scripting, error handling, object manipulation, documentation, and etc.

Link to the Presentation & Demos:
TampaPoSH-MAY132010.zip

For those who missed May meeting of Tampa Powershell User Group, next meeting will be in July.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Orlando CodeCamp Presentation

I recently presented at Orlando Code Camp on March 27, 2010 on PowerShell for Developers (In this session we will look at the a main use cases for developer usage of PowerShell. An overview of the PowerShell development model will be provided. This presentation will be similar to Chad Miller's presentation at Tampa Code Camp being more catered to .NET developers.)

For those who attended, link to the Presentation & Demos: OrlandoCodeCamp-MAR272010.zip


For those who want to learn more about PowerShell and in the Tampa Bay Area, come visit the Tampa Powershell User Group by Chad Miller and Ron Dameron.

In May, I will be speaking on: PowerShell Scripting for IT Professional (Basics of scripting, error handling, object manipulation, documentation, and etc in PowerShell)