Design effective AI prompts with Microsoft Prompt Engine
Microsoft’s open source tool helps you write code to work with generative AI, ensuring results give correct information and stay on topic.
Cobol in .NET with Otterkit
Old languages never die, they just get ported to a new runtime. Here’s a look at a new open source project for .NET that can help modernize Cobol.
Getting started with Azure OpenAI
Microsoft’s Azure-hosted OpenAI language models are now generally available, and it’s surprisingly simple to use them in your code.
Easier documentation with GitHub Pages
GitHub Pages lets you manage content exactly the same way you manage code, pushing from content development branches to main to publish new content. It’s a great way to ensure that code and documentation are delivered side by side.
SpiderLightning: Making WebAssembly cloud applications portable
Inside one of the technologies that powers Azure Kubernetes Service’s WebAssembly support, and promises to make applications portable across clouds and other hosts.
Introducing Cadl: Microsoft’s concise API design language
With Cadl, you can write a 500-line OpenAPI definition in 50 lines of code. It’s a logical way for architects and developers to construct and constrain APIs.
Azure Kubernetes doubles down on WebAssembly
WebAssembly is ideal for cloud-native apps. A shift from Krustlets to runwasi should simplify managing Wasm nodes in Azure Kubernetes Service.
Integrating Web3 technologies with Azure Devops
Microsoft’s Azure incubation team is experimenting with blockchain technologies. Can the company make them ready for the enterprise?
Inside Microsoft’s cloud-first .NET 7 release
November means it’s time for a new .NET release. What’s in .NET 7 for the cloud and for containers? Cross-platform support and cloud-native functionality.
Microsoft’s end-to-end Arm development environment is here at last
With Arm developer hardware now shipping, Windows is ready to embrace an NPU-powered AI future.
Ignite 2022: Making Azure your development hub
Microsoft is using its Ignite event to expand Azure’s role as its developer cloud, offering an isolated, configurable development platform.
Azure on Arm is here at last
Microsoft has finally unveiled its Arm-hosted virtual machines, a lower-power option for your cloud-native code.
Hands-on with Microsoft’s CBL-Mariner 2.0 Linux
How to install and configure the fast and lightweight container host Linux distribution for Azure Kubernetes Service and the Microsoft Container Registry.
Understand Visual Studio’s new extension model
Microsoft is updating how you build Visual Studio extensions, with new APIs and the ability to run extensions outside of the Visual Studio process.
Kestrel: The Microsoft web server you should be using
This alternative to Internet Information Services, which Microsoft uses for its own services, delivers modern dynamic web applications on common server platforms or in containers.
Lift and shift Windows applications to containers
Microsoft’s own experience with Microsoft 365 shows that moving to cloud-native is possible, even when you have a lot of code to move.
Manage your tasks with the Microsoft To Do API
A desktop task manager built on top of the Microsoft Graph lets you share tasks with groups and seamlessly link tasks to applications.
Build .NET apps for the metaverse with StereoKit
Microsoft’s open source mixed-reality tools make it easy to build OpenXR apps in .NET.
Build SBOMs with Microsoft’s SPDX SBOM generator
Microsoft is making its internal, cross-platform, software bill of materials generation tool public and open source.
Trying out the Azure Developer CLI
Microsoft’s new Azure developer tool streamlines development in the Azure cloud, from deploying dev environments to running CI/CD.