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Liverpool will be four points clear at the top of the Premier League on Christmas Day after a dominant 6-3 victory away at Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday. Headers from Luis Diaz and Alexis Mac Allister put the Reds two goals up after 36 minutes, before James Maddison pulled one back. Dominik Szoboszlai added the visitors' third in first-half stoppage time and was then joined on the scoresheet by Mohamed Salah, who converted twice following the interval. Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke netted what proved to be consolations as Diaz completed the scoring to see Arne Slot's side take advantage of second-placed Chelsea dropping points earlier in the day. Coming up in this podcast Arne Slot and Ryan Gravenberch give us their thoughts on the breathless encounter in the capital. Former Red Former Phil Thompson and current LFC Women defender Gemma Bonner joined Rob Jones in the studio for LFCTV's post-match show, whilst Nigel Spackman gave his analysis of the game from down at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. We also received contributions throughout the podcast from local fans Si Steers and Abigail Rudkin and from over in the US, Michael Crump from the Official LFC Supporters Club in Atlanta.
In Ep. 86, we'll discuss automation with Michael Crump, senior director of Fresh Operations at Wayne Farms, who notes specific ways that automation is changing the poultry processing industry. The deboning process, in particular, has become more advanced over the last decade or so and Crump describes how automated systems at meat processing plants have sped up specific tasks, but also have impacted jobs at modernized facilities. Crump oversees the company's big bird deboning operations at Wayne Farms plants in Laurel, Miss., Pendergrass, Ga. and Union Springs, Ala., and other facilities after a career that included 14 years at Pilgrim's Pride in a variety of roles.
In Ep. 18 of MeatingPod, we're talking automated equipment efficiencies and technology advances in poultry processing operations with Michael Crump, senior director of fresh operations with Wayne Farms. Michael shares his expertise in innovations such as deboning and X-ray technologies, foreign material detection, and DSI robotics for cutting and sorting chicken parts, along with what types of data collection can drive efficiencies in the poultry plant.
This episode is brought to you by me. If you like this show and want to support it, please visit my courses on Pluralsight and buy my new book "200 Things Developers Should Know", which is about Programming, Career, Troubleshooting, Dealing with Managers, Health, and much more. You can find my Pluralsight courses and the book at www.developerweeklypodcast.com/AboutMichael Crump works at Microsoft on the Microsoft Learn team focusing on security, compliance and identity. He is a coder, blogger, live-streamer and speaker of various security and cloud development topics. He’s passionate about helping developers understand the benefits of the cloud in a no-nonsense way. You can reach him on Twitter at mbcrump or by checking out his Twitch channel at https://twitch.tv/mbcrumpMicrosoft LearnFind Michael on TwitchFind Michael on YouTubeFollow Michael on TwitterCheck out Azure Tips and TricksCheck out the free Azure Developer's Guide
Show Links: Top 5 Azure Security Best Practices 1) Encrypt 2) Restrict access to your databases 3) … to your VMs 4) Protect Application Secrets 5) Use Azure Security Center to monitor and improve 6) BONUS tips!!! WAF, using a separate Subscription for production. Michael Crump works at Microsoft on the Microsoft Learn team focusing on security, compliance and identity. He is a coder, blogger, live-streamer and speaker of various security and cloud development topics. He’s passionate about helping developers understand the benefits of the cloud in a no-nonsense way. You can reach him on Twitter at mbcrump or by checking out his Twitch channel at https://twitch.tv/mbcrump Links: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/learn/roles/security-engineer https://twitch.tv/mbcrump https://youtube.com/mbcrump
our first August 2020 edition drops. Michael Crump form LFC Atlanta joins us to reflect on the rise of the Mighty Reds over the last five years, the genius of Gini, and how frequently the Barcelona nights have happened and are likely to happen in the future. Michael shares his own "Corner Taken Quickly' story #CornerTakenQuickly There's no doubt that @LFCAtlanta #LFCATL is a supporters club with a more professional video game than we have. #FirstStateKopites
Retired Birmingham homicide detective Chris Anderson, and defense attorney Fatima Silva give us a behind the scenes look of their investigation into the Michael Crump case. The Virginia man got convicted of murdering a drug dealer at a party- based largely on the eyewitness testimony of one visually impaired woman. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode I chat with Michael Crump from Microsoft about Azure Tips and Tricks.
Learn some of Michael Crump's favorite Azure tips and tricks—some long-standing, and new ones that have recently been added to become more productive with Azure. Watch this video to shave time off your coding tasks.Jump To:[00:35] Demo Start Azure Tips and Tricks projectTip 1: Quickly Changing ThemesTip 23: Testing in ProductionTip 33: LocksTip 31: Email AlertsCreate a free account (Azure)
Learn some of Michael Crump's favorite Azure tips and tricks—some long-standing, and new ones that have recently been added to become more productive with Azure. Watch this video to shave time off your coding tasks.Jump To:[00:35] Demo Start Azure Tips and Tricks projectTip 1: Quickly Changing ThemesTip 23: Testing in ProductionTip 33: LocksTip 31: Email AlertsCreate a free account (Azure)
Tweet this episode JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump. [00:37] Michael Crump Introduction Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure. [00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience. The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities. They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences [02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about? Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure. Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems. The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want. Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure. You don't have to be an operations expert. Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year. It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at. Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers. A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more. The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs. [12:04] Web Apps on Linux Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application. Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview. You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up. Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy. You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world. [15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows? Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows. The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows. This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel. Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows. Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically. [19:12] Supported Runtimes Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core. You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container. Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker. The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container. If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service. At certain levels, there's automatic scaling. [22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state. There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple. You can also pull logs across all systems. You can also use SSH in the browser [25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers? How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues. If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one. It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need. Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science. [28:28] How should you manage state? A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state. [30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB) It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy. You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward. [34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well. [36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux? Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure. Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB. You can also use any images on DockerHub. [40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction. Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic. [42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers. Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup? You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file. [45:38] How to get started Getting started with Node docs.microsoft.com Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit. Michael's Links michaelcrump.net @mbcrump github.com/mbcrump Jeremy's Links bit.ly/coderblog @jeremylikness github/jeremylikness Picks Aimee Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run. Joe Ozark on Netflix Star Wars: Rogue One Chuck Travelers on Netflix Jeremy Ozark filming in Woodstock, GA Autonomous Smart Desk LED light strips Michael Conference Call Bingo Life (Movie) Get Out (Movie)
Tweet this episode JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump. [00:37] Michael Crump Introduction Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure. [00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience. The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities. They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences [02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about? Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure. Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems. The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want. Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure. You don't have to be an operations expert. Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year. It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at. Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers. A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more. The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs. [12:04] Web Apps on Linux Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application. Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview. You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up. Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy. You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world. [15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows? Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows. The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows. This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel. Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows. Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically. [19:12] Supported Runtimes Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core. You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container. Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker. The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container. If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service. At certain levels, there's automatic scaling. [22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state. There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple. You can also pull logs across all systems. You can also use SSH in the browser [25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers? How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues. If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one. It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need. Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science. [28:28] How should you manage state? A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state. [30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB) It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy. You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward. [34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well. [36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux? Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure. Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB. You can also use any images on DockerHub. [40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction. Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic. [42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers. Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup? You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file. [45:38] How to get started Getting started with Node docs.microsoft.com Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit. Michael's Links michaelcrump.net @mbcrump github.com/mbcrump Jeremy's Links bit.ly/coderblog @jeremylikness github/jeremylikness Picks Aimee Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run. Joe Ozark on Netflix Star Wars: Rogue One Chuck Travelers on Netflix Jeremy Ozark filming in Woodstock, GA Autonomous Smart Desk LED light strips Michael Conference Call Bingo Life (Movie) Get Out (Movie)
Tweet this episode JSJ BONUS: Web Apps on Linux with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump In this episode Aimee Knight and Charles Max Wood discuss Microsoft's Web Apps on Linux offering with Jeremy Likness and Michael Crump. [00:37] Michael Crump Introduction Michael is on the developer experience team for Azure. [00:52] Jeremy Likness Introduction Jeremy is on the cloud developer advocacy team. Their mission is to remove friction and support developers and work with teams to build a positive experience. The NodeJS team is headed up by John Papa. They have teams around the world and involved in many open source communities. They're focused on building documentation and creating great experiences [02:54] What is it about Azure that people should be getting excited about? Azure is a huge platform. It can be overwhelming. They're trying to help you start with your problem and then see the solution as it exists on Azure. Azure is growing to embrace the needs of developers as they solve these problems. The experience is intended to be open and easy to use for any developer in any language on any platform. It allows you to work in whatever environment you want. Standing up applications in production is tough. Azure provides services and facilities (and interfaces) that make it easy to manage infrastructure. You don't have to be an operations expert. Chuck mentions this messaging as he heard it at Microsoft Connect() last year. It's not about bringing you to .NET. It's about making it easy where you're at. Aimee adds that as a new-ish person in the community and Azure excites her because the portal and tutorials are easy to follow for many new programmers. A lot of these features are available across command lines, tools, and much more. The documentation is great. See our interview with Dan Fernandez on the Microsoft Docs. [12:04] Web Apps on Linux Web application as a service offering from Microsoft. I don't need to worry about the platform, just what's different about my application. Web Apps has traditionally been on Windows. Web Apps on Linux is in preview. You can choose the size of your infrastructure. You only get billed for what you use and can scale up. Setting up multiple servers, managing synchronization and load balancing is a pain. Web Apps gives you a clean interface that makes this management easy. You can also scale across multiple datacenters around the world. [15:06] Why Linux? What's hard about Windows? Node was originally created on Linux and many tools run nicely on Linux. It was later ported to Windows. The toolchains and IDE's and build processes is in an ecosystem that is targeted more toward Linux than Windows. This allows people to work in an environment that operates how they expect instead of trying to map to an underlying Windows kernel. Aimee gives the example of trying to set up ImageMagick on Windows. Web Apps on Linux also allows you to build integrations with your tools that let you build, test, and deploy your application automatically. [19:12] Supported Runtimes Web Apps on Linux supports Node, PHP, Ruby, and .NET Core. You can run a docker container with Node up to 6.x. If you want Node 7.x and 8.x you can create your own Docker container. Web Apps on Linux is build on Docker. The containers also have SSH, so developers can log into the docker container and troubleshoot problems on the container. If you can build a container, you can also run it on this service. At certain levels, there's automatic scaling. [22:06] Consistency between containers? Shared ownership of state or assets It depends on how you build your app. The Docker containers have a shared storage where all the containers have access to the same data and state. There's a system called kudu that makes this really simple. You can also pull logs across all systems. You can also use SSH in the browser [25:23] What's painful about Linux and containers? How is the application built and how does it manage state so that you can isolate issues. If you have 20 containers, can you connect to the right one. It's up to you to manage correlation between containers so you can find the information you need. Knowing your traffic and understanding what to do to prepare for it with scaling and automation is sometimes more art than science. [28:28] How should you manage state? A lot of these systems lend themselves to running stateless, but you don't want to run mongodb on each container versus running one mongodb instance that everything attaches. You want a common place to store data for the entire app for shared state. [30:34] CosmosDB (was DocumentDB) It's an API equivalent to MongoDB. It's a database as a service and you can connect your containers to the CosmosDB in Azure using your portal to make it super easy. You may need to open up some firewall rules, but it should be pretty straightforward. [34:14] Third Party Logging Management Apps Azure has a service that provides metrics (Application Insights) and a logging service. Many other companies use elasticsearch based solutions that solve some of these problems as well. [36:06] How do people use Web Apps on Linux? Companies building new applications many times want to run without managing any infrastructure. So, they use Azure Functions, and other services on Azure. Lift and shift: Take a virtual machine and change it into a web app container that they can run in the cloud. They also move from SQL Server on a server to SQL Server on the cloud. Moving from hosted MongoDB to CosmosDB. You can also use any images on DockerHub. [40:06] Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment Whether you're using a private registry or cloud registry. When you publish a new image, it'll use a webhook to pull the custom image and deploy it. Or to run it through Continuous Integration and then deploy it without any human interaction. Chuck mentions the case when you haven't logged into a server for a while, there's a huge backlog of system updates. Updating your container definitions makes upkeep automatic. [42:02] Process files and workers with PM2 format You can set up instances to run across cores with the PM2 definitions. You can also make it run various types of workers on different containers. Why did you use PM2? What other uses are there for this kind of setup? You can tell it which processes to start up on boot. You can also have it restart processes when a file is changed, for example, with a config file you can have it restart the processes that run off that config file. [45:38] How to get started Getting started with Node docs.microsoft.com Trial account with a few hundred dollars in Azure credit. Michael's Links michaelcrump.net @mbcrump github.com/mbcrump Jeremy's Links bit.ly/coderblog @jeremylikness github/jeremylikness Picks Aimee Having a little bit of mindfulness while waiting on code and tests to run. Joe Ozark on Netflix Star Wars: Rogue One Chuck Travelers on Netflix Jeremy Ozark filming in Woodstock, GA Autonomous Smart Desk LED light strips Michael Conference Call Bingo Life (Movie) Get Out (Movie)
On this Episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Michael Crump talks about why Azure is important to .NET developers. We learn how Azure goes beyond virtualization, hosting databases and deploying websites. Michael talks about his experience with Azure coming from a C# client app background and the “ah-ha!” moment with the benefits of moving to the cloud.
We have Clint Rutkas and Michael Crump, Technical Product Managers at Microsoft that look after the Universal Windows Platform.
We’re back with another exciting episode as Michael questions Hollywood, Allen dreams of his Hackintosh, and Joe is surrounded by Star Wars as we talk about how to jumpstart your next app with Michael Crump (@mbcrump) and Clint Rutkas (@clintrutkas). If you’re reading these show notes via your podcast player, you can find this episode’s full […]
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, Michael Crump and Clint RutkaS from Microsoft discuss their project Windows Template Studio, a new getting started experience for Universal Windows Platform. 01:44 EC: This week there's a lot of amazing things being announced at Build. You guys are working on something that is coming out of this Build week. Why don't you give us a little introduction to the Windows Template Studio that you guys are working on? 02:05 CR: Okay, so Windows Template Studio is a... Helps out your File New experience. With UWP development, the templates basically that you have access to is a blank application. And for most developers, that could be a bit overwhelming and it helps... To build up a scaffolding for where you need to be can take multiple hours to just to get it functional when you're adding in, let's say six pages of background task, wanting live tiles. Let's say you wanna add in some, use the MVVM Light framework and add in suspend and resume. To do all that and to test it and validate, it takes multiple hours. We know this 'cause we actually asked one of our documentation experts to build an app and record it from start to finish. It took him about three hours. And we built out a dynamic generation tool that can do it in about 20 seconds with full clicking from start to finish. 03:13 MC: And I was just gonna add on to that last... That little piece is that I think a lot of the times that people get caught up in, "Okay, if I want to add X, Y and Z feature, I have to spend a ton of times in the documentation. I have to... " The typical developer may go and decide, "Oh, I'm gonna top this in and Bing or Google it. And it will hit me over to Stack Overflow, and I want to try to maybe find something that looks similar and then copy and paste. Or go try it, F5, and then go back to maybe some documentation." This is definitely designed to get you to that F5 experience, with the pages, frameworks and features that you need. 03:56 CR: And that's out of the gate. And the other great thing is, is that we call this Windows Template Studio. When your app is fully generated, you can F5 it. But all we do is build up the framework. We don't do everything for you because we can't assume what you, as a developer, want to do. So we have little to-dos. Like if you add in a background task. We have zero clue what type of background task trigger you want, or what that background task should actually functionally do. So, we add in a to-do that puts you exactly where that line of code that you need to start putting in stuff, and tell you this is where you need to do this. Or if you use a map control, we tell you exactly where to get the Bing map API key, and what variable you need to put that into. Out of the gate you can get quickly up and running to build out your app to do the cool stuff rather than the mundane stuff like building out the scaffolding. 04:55 EC: Let's try to visualize this for the folks listening. We're talking about Windows universal applications right now, so we're talking about the stuff that's in the Windows store, and you're running on your Windows desktop, HoloLens and things like that, right? So the UWP platform. And this is to augment the File New project experience where right now you get a blank application but it doesn't really do a whole lot. So you're saying it takes about three hours to build up something that's even moderately useful as a starter application. And in ASP.NET MVC, we have something that starts up. And we have things like Bootstrap installed, and some of the JavaScript libraries that we need. This Windows template studio gives us that experience, but there's a little bit more to it, right? Read more at http://developer.telerik.com/topics/net/announcing-windows-template-studio/
Guest: Michael Crump @mbcrump Full show notes are at https://developeronfire.com/podcast/episode-034-michael-crump-family-first-with-passion-for-tech
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, Ed Charbeneau and guests David Giard, Sam Basu, and Michael Crump share their mobile devlopment experiences in a panel discussion. This episode was recorded with a live audience at Codestock 2015.
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Jimmy Bogard technical architect with Headspring, shares his experience with running a successful open source project. Later, Sam Basu and Michael Crump join the show to talk about Apple, Microsoft and Telerik open source initiatives.
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guests Michael Crump and Jen Looper discuss mobile development and e-books. We learn what it's like to try to enter the app stores and what tools are needed to get started in mobile development.
Carl and Richard chat with Michael Crump about his experiences migrating Windows Phone 7.1 apps to Windows Phone 8. The conversation starts out with a short recap on some of the recent craziness around Nokia and Microsoft and the calibre of phones and tablets coming out these days - it's time for the second wave of Win 8 devices! Michael digs into the benefits and challenges around switching to Windows Phone 8, including access to new resources, dealing with multiple screen resolutions and buildings apps where the code base can be largely shared between Windows Phone 8 and Windows 8. It's time to make the move! Make sure you activate your Windows Azure credits in your MSDN Subscription! You could win an Aston Martin!