Posts Tagged ‘Visual Studio’

Download PL/SQL Developer lots of features, plug-ins & more

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Download PL/SQL Developer lots of features, plug-ins & more

Devart today releases dbForge Fusion for MySQL, v4.50 – a powerful add-in designed to simplify MySQL database development and enhance data management capabilities.

With dbForge Fusion, Devart continues its initiative to produce efficient database experiences for all the people in MySQL world.

New features in dbForge Fusion for MySQL, v4.50 include:

* Support of MS Visual Studio 2010 Now all the tools of dbForge Fusion for MySQL are available in MS Visual Studio 2010.

* More freedom for backing up schemas Schema Export wizard has been totally redesigned to Database Backup to enable users to back up schemas in automatic mode using Windows task scheduler, save backup options for future use, view automatically complied log file. Besides, old backup files are automatically removed based on date or quantity.

* New tool for database developers – Query Profiler dbForge Fusion offers results of internal MySQL tools like SHOW PROFILE and EXPLAIN in a convenient and clear GUI. Besides, you get STATUS variables for the required query automatically calculated.

Additional benefits:
o Plan of the query displayed in the tree view for easy review
o Profiling history that can be saved for further analysis
o Capability to compare profiling results in two clicks
o Capability to print profiling results
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PGI Visual Fortran for Visual Studio 2010

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

PGI Visual Fortran for Visual Studio 2010

PGI Visual Fortran for Visual Studio 2010 integrates PGI high-performance parallel Fortran compilers and tools with Microsoft Visual Studio to offer a high-productivity development solution to scientists and engineers upgrading to the latest 64-bit multi-core platforms running Microsoft Windows.

The new 10.6 version of the PGI 2010 release adds support for building Windows Fortran applications using the latest version of the popular Microsoft Visual Studio Integrated Development Environment.

Key features include:
— Native Fortran 95/2003 Visual Studio project system;
— Fortran text editor extensions, intrinsic function tips and keyword
completion;
— Integrated PGI-custom Fortran-capable debugger for debugging of
single-thread, multi-thread and OpenMP parallel applications and MSMPI
parallel applications running locally and on clusters;
— Microsoft Visual C++ interoperability and full support for Visual
Studio 2010, Visual Studio 2008 and Visual Studio 2005; and
— Optional support for the Visual Numerics IMSL Fortran Numerical
Library and the Intel MKL Math Kernel Library.

Source: scientificcomputing.com

Microsoft’s Windows Phone Developer Tools get a major update ahead of dev phone launch

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Microsoft’s Windows Phone Developer Tools get a major update ahead of dev phone launch

At MIcrosoft’s Worldwide Partner conference today, Andy Lees, Senior Vice President of Mobile Communications Business at Microsoft announced the beta of Windows Phone Developer tools has begun. Windows Phone 7

Back in March, the suite of Windows Phone development tools was launched as a Community Technology Preview (CTP) which included Visual Studio 2010 Express for Windows Phone, Windows Phone 7 Series Add-in for Visual Studio, a Windows Phone 7 Series emulator, XNA Game Studio 4.0, and a CTP release of Expression Blend 4. The CTP received an update in April, shortly after it was launched.

An important part of this beta release is the completed Application Certification Requirements list (.pdf here) which means that applications built in this beta will be mostly ready to submit to the Windows Marketplace. New tools for unlocking Windows Phones and deploying applications to unlocked devices have also been included in this beta.

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Microsoft Windows HPC Beta On Par with Linux

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Microsoft Windows HPC Beta On Par with Linux

Microsoft might be yielding slivers of ground to Linux in the desktop arena, but according to the company, it has made strides in the realm of high performance computing. On Monday, Microsoft unveiled the first beta of Windows HPC Server 2008 and released benchmarks showing performance parity with Linux in HPC systems.

fluent20.jpgThe news came at Supercomputing 09, the HPC industry’s annual confab of engineers, scientists and academia in Portland, Oregon. “We’re seeing performance numbers that rival Linux from micro-kernel benchmarks to ISV benchmarks,” said Vince Mendillo, senior director of high performance computing at Microsoft.

Performance gains are credited in part to enhancements to Microsoft’s implementation of the Message Passing Interface (MPI) specification and to RDMA over Ethernet and InfiniBand, which permits nodes to access system memory of other nodes in the cluster without going through the operating system. The beta also reportedly includes optimizations for new processors and can deploy and manage up to 1,000 nodes.

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Microsoft`s Parallel Push Takes Another Step Forward

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Microsoft`s Parallel Push Takes Another Step Forward

Microsoft is working to deliver parallel programming capabilities to the masses, in the way that perhaps only the software giant can. The company is pursuing data parallelism, a form of parallelization of computing across multiple processors in parallel computing environments.

Microsoft is working to deliver parallel programming capabilities to the masses, in the way that perhaps only the software giant can.

In an interview with eWEEK at the Microsoft Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2009 here, S. “Soma” Somasegar, senior vice president of Microsoft Developer Division, said the company is attacking the issue of parallel computing or concurrency on a number of levels, including at the language level, at the runtime level and at the operating system level, among others.

Indeed, “parallel” and “data” appeared to be two of the most frequently used terms at this PDC – in addition to “cloud” and maybe “modeling” – and, ironically, Microsoft has an emerging effort to pursue “data parallelism,” Somasegar said.

Data parallelism — also known as loop-level parallelism — is a form of parallelization of computing across multiple processors in parallel computing environments.

“We are grappling with something called data parallelism,” Somasegar said. “We think parallel programming is great, a lot of programming today deals with data. The more we can think about what data parallelism looks like, the more we think we can execute effectively on that. So one of the things we have in the parallel programming world and partnering with the C++ guys is looking at whether there are extensions that we should do that enable data parallelism.”

Somasegar explained that if a developer is going to do any kind of operation on data, either they can do it sequentially or they can do it in parallel. Mostly today it happens in a sequential way. “So you are limited by how fast you can go through a particular data access in a sequential way,” he said. “But if you have a large data set and you can partition the data set into half a dozen data sets or a dozen data sets and you can do some operations in parallel, you can do it that much faster.”

Microsoft focused a lot on the increasing need for programmers to interact more directly with data. The company announced a new effort known by the codename “Dallas,” which is an effort to deliver a data-as-a-service solution. Both SQL Azure and the new SQL Server Modeling Services offerings – ways for developers to get closely involved with data — demanded much attention at sessions and meetings at the PDC.

“You cannot talk to a developer today who doesn’t need access to data,” Somasegar said. “You cannot see an application that doesn’t have some involvement with data. We used to view programming as programming and data as data. But with the release of LINQ {Language Integrated Query] a few years ago, that was an attempt to get these two islands to be more integrated. Whether you are thinking about cloud, whether you’re thinking about on-premises on the back end, or whether you’re thinking about the front-end with a client, you really need to think about what your data access story looks like. So it’s a natural evolution, but probably one that is a little late in coming for the world at large.”

During a PDC panel on the future of programming, Don Box, a Microsoft software architect and distinguished engineer, said, “My day job is to make programmers learn to love the database.”

So Microsoft is attacking the problem of parallel programming from a number of fronts. And the company is doing it in the traditional Microsoft way of making its technology available to a large number of customers at a reasonable cost – the traditional “high-volume, low-cost” Microsoft strategy. Pushing early stage support for parallel programming out in its standard integrated development environment, Visual Studio, is a first step.

“There is a lot of early thinking that is happening in multiple dimensions of the company and a few concrete things that we know that we are delivering in Visual Studio 2010.”

What Microsoft is delivering in Visual Studio 2010 includes tooling such as debugging tools for coding for concurrency, and delivering parallel libraries to enable developers to parallelize certain parts of their application – such as the Task Parallel Library (TPL).

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