Advertisement
Promo

Application development Toolkit

Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 to get 'black box'

Ina Fried CNET News

Published: 30 Sep 2008 08:18 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

In the next version of its developer-tool suite, Visual Studio 2010, Microsoft plans to include the ability to record the full screens of what testers are seeing, as well as data about their machine.

When a test application crashes, the technology will enable developers to see the bug as it occurred.

In an interview last week, Dave Mendlen, director in Microsoft's Developer Division, said the feature is designed to avoid the all-too-frequent conflict that occurs when a software tester finds a bug that the developer says can't be reproduced. Internally, the feature has been called 'TiVo for debuggers'.

Although the feature is initially only aimed at in-house testers, a similar feature could one day find its way into broader testing and potentially even into Microsoft beta products.

"I wouldn't be surprised at all to see this become a way that we do beta management," Mendlen said.

Microsoft offered few other details about Visual Studio 2010 and the .Net Framework 4.0. However, it is a fairly safe bet that better support for cloud-based services will be included. "That is certainly an area that Visual Studio and the .Net Framework will have to address," Mendlen said. "As we enable service-based technologies, of course we will have to tool it."

The company also talked about modelling tools that will make it easier for new programmers in a team to get a sense of how earlier versions of software work.

One of the other goals is to add more business-intelligence tools — dashboards, for example — that enable project managers to assess whether a development project is on track. "The guys that are paying the bills often get very little info," Mendlen said.

Read this

Q&A
From Disney to 'dogfooding': Life as Microsoft's CIO

Can Microsoft's chief information officer, former Disney executive Tony Scott, work a little magic on the customer experience?

Read more +

Mendlen said Visual Studio 2010 is expected to ship in fiscal year 2010. "I can tell you it won't ship in 2011," he said.

The software giant is not the only company looking to transfer the TiVo notion to software development. A company called Replay Solutions launched a similar product in June for enterprise Java applications.

Microsoft chairman Bill Gates talked about adding a 'black box' feature to Windows (without the video-recording ability) in 2005. Microsoft later said it wasn't broadly expanding the Watson error-reporting capabilities beyond the kinds of data it already had been collecting. It never became totally clear what Gates was referring to.

A Microsoft representative did say: "The two technologies are not related and, in Visual Studio Team System, the black box is only on testers' machines and only turned on when the tester decides it should be turned on."

Credit: Visual Studio 2010 to come with 'black box' from CNET News

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
1 out of 1 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Video icon

Video

Discussions

CA CA

Campaigners criticise '£10bn NHS IT ov...

Monday 23 November 2009, 10:57 PM

1 comment
CA CA

Data Robotics launches Drobo Elite and...

Monday 23 November 2009, 10:37 PM

1 comment
CA CA

So...

Monday 23 November 2009, 10:29 PM

1 comment
CA CA

So how come...

Monday 23 November 2009, 10:17 PM

1 comment

Featured Talkback

In association with Network Liberation Movement
The fact is: Software developers today are really designers and not coders. The reason that business anlaysts exist today to model solutions is because they understand the value of designing software before writing it. All too often developers create code that has little value because they do not understand that business classes interact with other classes within the confines of a working model or pattern.

By: 1000165269

Read full story:
Making sense of agile modelling


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters