What Do You Want?
I'm curious. You know me...I live to work for you. I want to give you what you want.
Have I buttered you up enough? Good.
I actually want to know what you want to read about in regard to Visual Studio Team System, and/or Team Foundation Server. It can be anything? You want to know about creating your own Process Template...cool. You want to know about using the profiling tools...OK. You would rather hear about setting up regular builds, or continuous integration...excellent.
My goal is to find out which topics are of interest to you, my Friendly Reader, and ensure we are providing the resources you want. It can be on VSTS 2005, 2008 or even the Rosario CTP. Anything goes.
Let's hear it...what do you want?
Technorati tags: VSTS
Comments
Anonymous
August 13, 2007
Hey, Doug. I would be interested in an intro, 101 type of lesson on the API structures to access work items in TFS.Anonymous
August 15, 2007
Doug Seven , our newest addition to the Team System marketing team, would like to hear from you regardingAnonymous
August 15, 2007
Doug Seven , our newest addition to the Team System marketing team, would like to hear from you regardingAnonymous
August 15, 2007
I would like to hear how to customize VSTS for tracking and reporting workitems etc. for an agile teamAnonymous
August 15, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
August 17, 2007
Hi Doug, I do a project planning in MPP and create related tasks, by which I mean parent and child tasks, and publish it on TFS2005. With this I get my work items in TFS. Now the same parent-child relationship should exist between these workitems(related workitems). Now when I access these workitems via MPP, the same relationship should reflect in my MPP as well!!. Hope you have understood my scenario. And one more thing, whenever there is a parent-child related tasks or workitems, until n unless I close my child tasks, I should not be allowed to close my parent task. This, I think would be a great feature that I would desire to see in future versions of TFS. Cheers...Anonymous
August 17, 2007
I've discussed this a bit with my DE, Charlie Calvert and others; but it's a hard sell... Basically, users of Visual Studio can't follow it's release schedule (i.e. they're on their own release schedule that is disparate from Visual Studio's) and they can't switch development tools mid-stream). Most places aren't going to start developing production code with a new release until at least 6 months after release (probably more). At that time they don't really have any support for fixes or changes and they have the feeling of being left out in the cold. It would be nice if some reasonably senior talent could be scheduled time for design changes and fixes during the maintenance of a release so end-users don't get the feeling that Microsoft has taken their money and no longer feeds obliged to do anything until they purchase vNext.Anonymous
August 21, 2007
I'm very much into CMMI, 6Sigma, Lean and BPM, I need a modeler!!Anonymous
September 07, 2007
Team System covers the whole range from defining the project, requirements, coding, testing and all the works... but left out internationalization completely? Why is that and when do you plan to support dictionaries, glossaries, resource extraction, translator tools and this kind of stuff? Or is it already in there and I simply don't find it?Anonymous
September 17, 2007
Figuring out which features are available in which edition / sub-edition of which product or combination of products is extremely difficult. There are some clues for 2005 scattered around in various KBs and PDFs but I can't find even that much for 2008. Help?