News
        
        Microsoft Updates Windows Cloud Tooling
        
        
        
			- By Kathleen Richards
- January 16, 2009
        Microsoft released the second  community technology previews (CTPs) of its Software Development Kit (SDK) and Visual Studio  extensions for the new Windows Azure cloud services platform.
Azure, which consists  of an operating system and a developer services platform, took center stage at  Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference in late October. The technology  was made available to all PDC attendees immediately after the show, although  many developers had to wait several weeks to get the tokens needed to  access the Azure platform. The Azure previews were opened to a larger  group of MSDN subscribers after Microsoft provided access to interested PDC  attendees. 
The Azure SDK includes  the development fabric controller and storage services needed for building and  testing cloud apps locally in Visual Studio 2008 SP1 with the Azure VS extensions.  Developers need to register with Microsoft to receive the tokens required to "publish"  apps to the Azure cloud. 
The Azure SDK January  2009 CTP and the Windows Azure Tools for Microsoft Visual  Studio January 2009 CTP consist primarily of  performance and bug fixes, according to Microsoft's Azure team members.
Gus Perez, the  principal development lead for Windows Azure Tools for Visual Studio, outlines  some of the key VS fixes in his blog:
  
    "• Code/Build/Run/Debug       cycle
         • Support       for Silverlight debugging on Web Roles
       • Improved       Development Storage Service integration
        • Service       definition and configuration file errors are now detailed in VS 
       • Bug       where publishing a package that was above a certain size would fail has       been fixed."    
Jim Nakashima, program manager for the  Windows Azure Tools for Visual Studio team, offers an extensive overview of the  performance and bug fixes in VS extensions and the Azure SDK in his  Cloudy in Seattle  blog.  He notes that many of the SDK fixes were responses to customers' requests. The SDK  January 2009 CTP also offers better integration with Visual Studio for the  Storage services, according to Nakashima. 
The latest bits underscore Microsoft's commitment to  working with early testers in the developer community to advance the Azure platform. Blogs, forums and Azure user groups are starting to build a  community around the new technology. Developers can find more information on  Perez's Azure links page. Microsoft will also host MSDN Developer Conferences in many cities during the next several  months to introduce the technologies that were announced at PDC.     
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kathleen Richards is the editor of RedDevNews.com and executive editor of Visual Studio Magazine.