I am giving a webcast for MSDN on Wednesday November 19, 2008 at 10:00am Pacific Time/3:00pm EST/6:00pm UK/19:00 Western Europe.
From the event overview:
"In this webcast, you learn how to create a network connection in code and how to discover if you have network connectivity. We look at the design of applications that need to be network aware and strategies for creating applications that can operate when disconnected from the network and then sync up data when network connectivity is restored. We also compare the options for transferring data over a network connection, which include ActiveSync, Microsoft SQL Server merge replication, remote data access (RDA), SQLClient, Microsoft Synchronization Services for ADO.NET, Windows Communication Foundation (WCF), SOAP-based Web services, RESTful data services, and Microsoft Message Queuing (MSMQ). We explain the benefits and shortcomings of each sync technology and demonstrate many of them so you can select the right solution for your data synchronization needs.In this webcast, you learn how to create a network connection in code and how to discover if you have network connectivity. We look at the design of applications that need to be network aware and strategies for creating applications that can operate when disconnected from the network and then sync up data when network connectivity is restored. We also compare the options for transferring data over a network connection, which include ActiveSync, Microsoft SQL Server merge replication, remote data access (RDA), SQLClient, Microsoft Synchronization Services for ADO.NET, Windows Communication Foundation (WCF), SOAP-based Web services, RESTful data services, and Microsoft Message Queuing (MSMQ). We explain the benefits and shortcomings of each sync technology and demonstrate many of them so you can select the right solution for your data synchronization needs."
Please go to the MSDN Webcasts event page to register, or if you missed it, to download the recording.
Hope you can watch and ask some questions!
Posted
Nov 17 2008, 05:08 AM
by
Andy Wigley