Martin Hinshelwood's Blog

A Scottish dyslexic software developer: Team System MVP, .NET architect, developer, evangelist, technology enthusiast and multi-dimensional free thinker


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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.


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Service orientation Service-orientation is a design paradigm that specifies the creation of automation logic in the form of services. It is applied as a strategic goal in developing a service-oriented architecture (SOA). Like other design paradigms, service-orientation provides a means of achieving a separation of concerns.
Service-oriented architecture describes an architecture that uses loosely coupled services to support the requirements of business processes and users. Resources on a network[1] in a SOA environment are made available as independent services that can be accessed without knowledge of their underlying platform implementation.[2] These concepts can be applied to business, software and other types of producer/consumer systems.

TFS Event Handler in .NET 3.5 Part 2 - Handling Team Foundation Server Events


posted @ Friday, September 07, 2007 1:08 AM | Feedback (4) |


TFS Event Handler in .NET 3.5 Part 1 - The Architecture


posted @ Tuesday, August 21, 2007 2:10 PM | Feedback (1) |


The future of software development


I have been thinking a lot recently about the future of software development and where I see it going. I have worked for seven companies since leaving university (two design studios, two software studios, one community startup, one Internet bank and one investment bank), and my conclusion is that all of that SSADM (Structured Systems Analysis and Design Methodologies), or Development Lifecycle, that I learned in university does not work in the real world. Yes, if you can charge your customers tw

posted @ Saturday, July 14, 2007 7:52 PM | Feedback (4) |


Creating a managed service factory


I had a plan. I wanted to create a way of accessing services in multiple locations from any location. Each location could have one or more services which may be duplications or different. That is a really abstract way of thing about it, but I eventually came up with a solution...

posted @ Tuesday, June 19, 2007 11:53 PM | Feedback (0) |