Microsoft PDC 2009: What's on tap for developers this November?

By | August 4, 2009, 5:41am PDT

Summary: Microsoft opened up registration for its Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2009 on August 4. As it will be too early for Microsoft to start detailing publicly what’s coming in Windows 8, what will the Softies be highlighting this November?

Microsoft opened up registration for its Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2009 on August 4. This year’s developer-fest is in Los Angeles again, as it was last year, and will run from November 16 to 19.

As it will be too early for Microsoft to start detailing publicly what’s coming in Windows 8, what will the Softies be highlighting at this year’s conference?

Keynotes are on tap from the elusive Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie and Server and Tools President Bob Muglia. (Other keynotes will be added to the agenda later this year, company officials said.) Azure, Microsoft’s cloud platform, is slated to go from beta to final around the time of the PDC. And Microsoft also plans to offer a number of sessions on its hosted-development strategy at the show, as well. (Think xRM, SharePoint Services, and other “utility computing” building blocks.) Sessions dedicated to SQL Azure, Microsoft’s hosted SQL Server service, also are on the agenda.

Even though Microsoft will have launched Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 less than a month before the PDC, on October 22, there will still be lots of sessions around developing for those platforms. Windows expert and Technical Fellow Marc Russinovich is on tap to talk about the kernel changes Microsoft made in Windows 7/Windows Server 2008 R2.

Russinovich isn’t the only “Big Brain” slated to speak at the confab. Other Microsoft Technical Fellows, including parallel-computing expert Burton Smith and database guru Dave Campbell are on the line-up, as well.

There is going to be a lot of content on .Net Framework 4 and Visual Studio 2010 (both of which are expected to launch around spring 2010, last I heard). Microsoft also is promising a “sneak peek” at some of the so-far unspecified new features in the next version of Silverlight (which I’d expect to be called Silverlight 4) during the PDC.

There are a few sessions dedicated to developing for SharePoint 2010 on the docket. There’s a session on “Office 2010 as a RAD (Rapid Application Development) platform.” I’m assuming this is Microsoft’s updated Office Business Applications (OBA) platform/strategy.

I asked Tim O’Brien, Director of Microsoft’s Platform Strategy Group, whether there would be much, if any, PDC content dedicated to developing for Windows Mobile. The first Windows Mobile 6.5 phones are set to launch in October and developers are champing at the bit for information on Windows Mobile 7.

“We are marching toward getting 6.5 out. That’s our focus right now,” is all O’Brien would say. In other words, guess we’ll have to wait and see if WinMo makes it onto the PDC agenda in any meaningful way.

I also asked O’Brien whether Microsoft was still planning to hold a Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) this year. Last year, Microsoft cancelled WinHEC.

“There’s no reason to say we won’t,” said O’Brien. But he also acknowledged he didn’t know for sure whether or when Microsoft would hold a WinHEC in 2009. Guess that’s another wait-and-see, too.

Microsoft is planning to Webcast the keynotes and many of the PDC sessions for those who can’t make the show in person. Me? I’m planning on making the cross-country trek myself to my favorite Microsoft show of the year.

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Topics

Mary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 25 years for a variety of publications and Web sites, and is a frequent guest on radio, TV and podcasts, speaking about all things Microsoft-related. She is the author of Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft plans to stay relevant in the post-Gates era (John Wiley & Sons, 2008).

Disclosure

Mary-Jo Foley

Freelance journalist/blogger Mary Jo Foley has nothing to disclose. WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get). I do not own Microsoft stock or stock in any of its partners or competitors. I have no business ventures that are sponsored by/funded by Microsoft or any of its partners or competitors.

Biography

Mary-Jo Foley

Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 25 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She has kept close tabs on Microsoft strategy, products and technologies for the past 10 years. In the late 1990s, she penned the award-winning "At The Evil Empire" column for ZDNet, and more recently the Microsoft Watch blog for Ziff Davis.

Got a tip? Send her an email with your rants, rumors, tips and tattles. Confidentiality guaranteed.

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RE: Microsoft PDC 2009: What's on tap for developers this November?
dfwekrdfe84-24353644928315992404876644648292 Updated - 11th Nov
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Silverlight Mobile
damylen 4th Aug 2009
I hope they finally, finally open up some silverlight mobile goods.
0 Votes
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Contributr
Yes. That would make sense
Mary Jo Foley 4th Aug 2009
and be good to finally hear some real details on that. Crossing fingers that they do this at the PDC. Thanks. MJ
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My waiting list
LBiege 4th Aug 2009
Visual Studio 2010.

WorkFlow 4.0

C# 4

Oslo.

A preview of SilverLight 4 would be nice but probably too much to ask.
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What about WPF?
johngalt_0705 4th Aug 2009
Hey, Mary Jo,

I scanned your post for "WPF". Nothing.

There was *very* little WPF content at last year's PDC. Mostly, it was XAML 2009 stuff. The WPF Futures talk was a complete joke. If Microsoft wants WPF to be taken seriously, it is time for Version 2 (or 3, depending on how you count) of WPF to be released (presumably in .NET 4.0) with some significant fanfare. So far, nothing but crickets.

Come on, Microsoft.
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Contributr
WPF
Mary Jo Foley 4th Aug 2009
MS has posted 25 sessions only so far. They are going to keep adding them over the next 3 months... So far, I see only one session mentioning WPF by name (plus a few others mentioning .Net 4). This is the one mentioning WPF:

Microsoft Unified Communications: Developer Platform Futures

Learn how Microsoft Communications Server and Microsoft Exchange provide a comprehensive and flexible communications platform for developers. Get a first look at the next generation of this platform through a series of demos and code examples. See how to embed Communicator features in your application using new Microsoft Silverlight and Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) controls, and learn about the new API to develop full custom clients for Communications Server. Also see how the UC Managed API 3.0 provides access to the new Voice-over-IP features of Communication Server.

THanks. MJ
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Not a whole lot of break through to add to it. Maybe some voice recognition or surface stuff, and that's about it.
0 Votes
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What exactly are you looking for?
jackbond 4th Aug 2009
WPF in its existing form is hands down the best user interface framework EVER designed. Nothing else even comes remotely close.
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So far, so good, but . . . .
johngalt_0705 5th Aug 2009
I agree - WPF is wonderful. But when you take an existing MFC app, for example, and attempt to move it to WPF, you find opportunities to fill in gaps in WPF. For one thing, WPF's retained-mode graphics have too much overhead for rendering complex scenes. WriteableBitmap is a great stopgap, but it means I'm still having to use GDI graphics. We're looking at Direct2D, but I'd like to see seamless interop between Direct2D and WPF. WPF could also use some application frameworks. For example, WPF does not support MDI, which I know is supposed to be dead, but it doesn't really offer a replacement either. There are other things that are very hard to do in WPF, like hooking up to the shell (so that double-clicking a file of your app's type loads it into your application).

If you are writing a database front end or line-of-business app from scratch, WPF probably has everything you need. If you are trying to move an existing app to WPF, you will find the sort of holes that Microsoft needs to fill in to make WPF truly the Foundation of Windows Presentation.

Hope that helps.
Hi there, Tim Sneath here from the client platform team at Microsoft. As MJF mentions, we've released just a tiny subset of sessions so far. A lot of the coolest sessions are under embargo until the event starts - we don't want to reveal everything yet!

As far as WPF is concerned, you can certainly expect to see some depth content at the event. I'm interested in what you'd like to see covered, John - we're always open to ideas of topics that need coverage. Feel free to drop me a line at tims at microsoft.com.

Hope to see you at PDC!

Tim
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Not buying a pig in a poke this year
johngalt_0705 5th Aug 2009
Hey, Tim,

I will definitely respond offline to your invitation for WPF topics, but I wanted to say this here:

Microsoft's approach to PDC of not telling us what the content will be and expecting us all to just fly out there and hope it's something we care about is just not going to cut it in this economy. We sent 3 to PDC last year, largely on spec. The WPF content, which is all we really cared about, was mediocre at best, perhaps understandably because you had just wrapped up .NET 3.5 SP1 and weren't ready to talk about what would be in .NET 4.0. We did get value from being able to ask questions in person to Microsoft staff about both WPF and C++/CLI. This year, our current plan is to send at most 1 person. If we cannot see in advance that there will be worthwhile WPF content on display, that will decrease to 0. If we knew in advance exactly what the WPF content would be, *and* it was highly compelling, we *might* send more than 1 person. But it will be a tough sell.

In the Internet age, the primary value of attending a conference in person is the access you have to ask questions in person. We're all going to have the bits and access to session videos within a few days anyways. To maximize the in-person value, it would be helpful to have the bits *before* the conference, so we could play with them some and then come to the conference with questions at the ready.

Thanks.

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Save your money and take a pass.
No_Ax_to_Grind 4th Aug 2009
After the last two years and the heaping of bull droppings fpoisted on the attendies, it's just not worth it any more.

Myself, I've had enough of MS saying "this is how it will be" only to find they changed direction 180 degrees when the products come out. Besides, anything of any real significance will be all over the tech sites.

The only reason to attend this year is if you want a vaction and a tax write off...
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They're all pointless boondoggles
jackbond 4th Aug 2009
"The only reason to attend this year is if you want a vaction and a tax write off..."

Isn't that the only point of any of these conferences? Conferences were great before web, but have little real value any more. Not like I had to go to Mix this year to find out about all the great new stuff in Silverlight 3, and I live in Vegas.
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RE: Microsoft PDC 2009: What's on tap for developers this November?
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RE: Microsoft PDC 2009: What's on tap for developers this November?
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