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Best Practices for Accelerating Problem Resolution in .NET Applications and Web Services


Identify   12.12.05

Whether you are in the process of building Microsoft.NET applications or have .NET-based Web Services already running in production, you must ensure that these applications deliver the expected return on investment (ROI), and that means high levels of application availability and performance.
With .NET, you have to make myriad components and services— some developed in-house and some developed by a 3rd party—work together flawlessly on a whole new software infrastructure to form a reliable, scalable business process. Whether migrating an existing application or developing from scratch, you are bound to face many challenges when problems occur. And problems will occur.







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Editors Letter
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Alphabet Street 

Each month we try our hardest to cover every angle and aspect of software engineering. Indeed, we pride ourselves on our platform-agnostic wide ranging view of the development landscape. How then could we push ourselves even further and really broaden the spectrum of our editorial coverage? The answer had to be – the complete A to Z of software. Well, not complete, but a rip roaring twenty-six letter technology tour to provoke some interest and thoughts in areas you might not normally think about.

But first, a personal confession so that you know how all this started. I actually got the idea from reading a cookery magazine that had done something similar. You know the kind of thing – A for apples, B for bread, C for custard and so on. But those pesky food journalists have it easy don’t they? When they get to X, Y and Z they can just use X for Xérès Sherry, Y for Yeast and even Z for Zabaglione.

Now, X is simple enough with plenty of XMLs out there, Z for zero tolerance we reckoned, but Y, wow - now that is a hard one.

So, please dive in and jump to your favourite letter. It was always going to be the case that we would miss out on a few key areas, but we think it’s pretty cool to be able to work your way through the whole alphabet and just stay within the world of software development. Next month, 1001 aspects of application development and how you can implement them in your daily working schedule. Joke – ok?

Happy coding!

Adrian Bridgwater

Editor

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