►
From YouTube: ASP.NET Community Standup - July 3, 2018 - Trying Out The New Studio And Breaking Things
Description
Community links for this week: https://www.papercall.io/dotnetconf-2018
A
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A
A
A
So
right
now
everyone
can
only
see
you
and
so
that's
right,
because
what
I
would
have
to
do
is
learn.
Howdy
is
I.
Could
I
could
do
this?
And
now
they
all
see
me
see
so
now
they
can
all
see
me.
They
can't
hear
John,
apparently,
okay,
so
let
me
figure
this
out.
They
can't
hear
you
so
everyone's
just
listening
to
me.
Apparently
we
see
John
and
hear
Damien
what
a
comedy
of
errors.
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
A
B
B
A
B
A
B
A
Some
people
say
that
you
have
a
weird
reverb,
and
so
some
people
that
my
video
is
awesome,
so
I'm
going
like
through
a
fork,
a
capture
device
straight
into
my
laptop
through
OBS
straight
into
into
YouTube.
So
this
is
like
by
easily
the
best
video
stream
we've
ever
had.
Where
we're
having
some
trouble
is,
we
did
have
a
machine
set
up,
it's
back
there
behind
the
camera
with,
and
it's
supposed
to
give
me
all
this
wonderful
ability
to
hit
buttons
to
change
scenes
and
stuff,
but
we
lost
the
audio
on
it.
A
Like
two
minutes
before
we
were
supposed
to
get
this
working,
and
so
then
we'd
had
to
we
had
to
to
revert
to
a
different
thing.
Improvised
said,
people
are
also
saying
that
the
the
mic
seems
to
be
quite
sensitive,
so
I
have
to
I
have
to
speak
right
into
the
microphone
consistent.
Is
that
right,
how's?
That
sensor.
B
B
A
Me
through
the
different
through
the
coal
which
isn't
coming
through
this
audio,
it
says
live
site.
Isn't
playing?
Videos
is
not
allowed
to
play
on
other
sites.
So
when
we
created
the
embed
link,
remember
we've
had
this
problem
before
you
have
to
enable
the
streaming
channel
to
be
embedded.
It's
an
explicit
thing
and
we
may
not
have
done
that
for
and
now
I'm
people.
A
Is
much
better
but
I'm
not
sure
what
they're
referring
to
sounds
better?
Okay,
things
sound,
better,
okay,
okay!
Does
that
we
both
sound
better!
Is
that
what
people
are
saying
we
both
sound
better
and
they
see
more
hair?
Yes,
I
have
more
hair
in
the
game,
is
better
quality,
so
we're
probably
picking
up
more
hair
all
right!
Well,
I
get
yeah
we're
in
a
situation
where
we
could
attempt
to
do
a
show
of
some
sorts
right
now
sure
yeah.
Yes,.
B
A
A
Gonna
flip
to
you,
I'm
gonna,
put
you
there.
Everyone
is
looking
at
you
now,
okay,
so
if
you
share
your
screen,
I've
attempted
to
do
just
that.
Okay,
I've,
seen
I'd,
say
your
profile
picture.
I,
don't
see
your
desktop
yet!
Oh
there
we
go
I,
see
your
desktop
and
deal.
Everyone
says
that
you
sound
like
you're
calling
from
a
phone
booth,
so
I'm
gonna,
guess
it's
has
to
do
with
the
fact
that
your
audio
is
coming
out
through
the
display
capture
device,
and
then
that
is
the
audio
that
everyone
is
hearing.
A
A
B
B
We've
been
trying
a
lot
of
posts
from
him
using
docker,
and
here
he
had
a
case
where
he
wanted
to
actually
build
on
full
frame,
work
and
mono,
and
so
he
walks
through
what
he
did
in
order
to
make
that
happen
and
and
as
I
always
appreciate
from
him,
he
added
a
tldr
on
there
for
us
so,
but
basically
there's
a
props
file
which
tells
msbuild
where
to
find
the
mono
runtime.
Okay,
so
there's
a
mono
framework
path,
override
sorry
set
setup
talks
about
some
other
things
directly.
B
Built
props
should
have
work,
but
it
didn't
work
in
his
case.
It
wasn't
sure
why
and
then
he
goes
through
and
talks
about
adding
references
for
facades
and
getting
xunit
running
and
then
just
kind
of
summarizes
it.
So
this
is
kind
of
his
I
read
a
bunch
of
stuff
I
found
some
github
issues,
I
got
it
to
work
and
here's
what
I
did
so
yeah.
A
B
Okay,
cool
this
is
Shane
Boyer's,
which
hopefully
will
load.
So
what
what
happened
here?
Not
all
open
it
in
a
new
tab
or
something
there.
It
is
so
here
he's
been
going
through
a
series
where
you
know
that
workshop.
We
did
in
the
past
we've
done
many
times,
so
he
updated
it
and
set
up,
see
icd.
It's
got
cool,
build
status.
B
You
know
all
that
kind
of
stuff
on
the
repo
as
part
of
doing
that,
he
wanted
to
be
able
to
check
through
all
the
different
save
point
folders,
for
what
NuGet
packages
are
out
of
date
mm-hmm.
So
this
is
a
great
place.
We're
using
the.net,
outdated
global
tool,
helped
him
out,
so
he
just
went
in,
did
dot
in
had
updated
and
he's
able
to
see
for
all
the
subfolders.
What
needs
to
be
up
to.
A
B
B
But
this
is
this:
dotnet
I
updated
global
tool,
so
cool,
very
cool,
okay,
cool
post
from
David
pine.
This
is
cream
city
code
and
then
I
think
he
did
it
somewhere
else
as
well.
He
took
angular
and
asp
net
core
API
and
the
front-end
integration
with
camera
and
basically
did
a
photo
booth.
So
these
are
capturing
pictures
of
people
at
the
conference
and
then
pulling
them
in
using
and
converting
using
image
sharp
and
then
he's
creating
an
animated,
gif
and
he's
putting
it
into
blob
storage
and
sending
sms
out
via
Twilio.
So
nice
well.
B
Hooking,
a
lot
of
cool
stuff
together,
so
I
like
this
I
mean
this.
Isn't
this
is
non-trivial
to
get
all
these
things
working
together,
but
I
do
like
the
way
that
he
kind
of
pulled
together.
Here's
you
know:
I'm,
not
gonna,
try
and
hand
code
in
an
animated,
gif,
I'm
gonna
use
a
Matt
sharp
and
you
know
kind
of
like
hooking
services
together
really
intelligently.
So.
A
B
B
B
An
online
event
Carol
helped
organize
this,
and
this
is
a
online
hackathon
where
they
went
through
and
just
hacked
on
stuff.
So
this
was
a
lot
of
people
worked
on
core
FX,
core
CLR
and
just
kind
of
you
know
added
contributions.
Work
together
on
stuff.
This
was
cool.
He
put
in
a
screenshot
of
his
pull
request
and
stuff.
So
I
would
love
to
see
more
of
this
I'm
very
interested
from.
B
A
B
A
B
So
like
sent
me
this,
this
is
the
auth
0
wiki
and
this
is
just
showing
their
documentation
for
hooking
up
r0,
and
this
is
including
a
0
on
ocation
for
both
a
web
app
front
end
and
then
a
web
api
and
kind
of
coordinating
it
all
together.
So
you
know
I
click
through
and
read
through
all
this
is
it's.
It's
really
just
well-documented
a
lot
of
pictures
and
and
stuff.
So
I
love
to
see
this
from
the
you
know.
They
are
zeroes
a
good
identity
provider.
B
B
He
reintegrated
localization,
so
this
is
yeah.
This
is
really
cool,
so
he
went
in
he's,
set
it
up
for
for
Swiss
localization.
He
set
up
all
the
stuff.
You
know
configuring
in
the
Middle
where
he
showed
you
know,
setting
up
the
front
end
views
you
know
getting
those
localized
strings
and
then
also
doing
the
backend
code
for
that
as
well,
so
yeah
really
cool
and
then
going
through
ins
showing
you
know:
here's
how
that
all
works.
That's.
A
A
A
Because
all
these
pages
are
in
a
package
now,
that's
how
they
deliver
it,
but
they
not
ridden
to
support
localization.
So
this
is
basically
updating
those
pages
to
support
localization,
which
would
then
require
them
to
be
recompiled
into
a
new
package
which
is
identity,
pages
that
use
the
localization
features,
and
then
you
could
plug
in
different
languages
sort
of
separately
to
that
it
wouldn't
require
a
package
for
that.
So
that's
that's
actually
interesting.
A
We
could
actually
consider
whether
this
should
just
be
part
of
the
default
packages
and
that
this
could
effectively
turn
into
a
PR
at
some
point
and
the
default
identity
pages
that
are
now
to
live
for
our
package
would
support
the
localization
primitives
we
have
now
we
haven't
done
a
good
enjoined
like
I,
don't
know
whether
what
we
have
right
now
would
work
with
that
really.
Well,
no,
that's
yeah
someone's
trying
that's
good,
so
we
should
figure
that
out
yeah.
B
A
B
What's
cool
here
is
the
I
mean
my
understanding
of
the
big
feature
of
data
seating?
It's
it's
something
where
you
can
it
integrates
more
cleanly,
so
before
I
always
felt
like
I
was
finding
some
hook
and
then
saying
like.
If
this
table
exists,
it
doesn't
exist,
created
Jam,
all
this
data
in
there.
This
is
actually
like
supportive,
for
instance,
with
migrations.
So
you
can
have
your
migrations
can
support
seed
data,
which
is
cool
because
then
over
time.
B
A
B
So
this
one
we've
shown
this
before
this:
the
framework
benchmarks,
tech
empower
around
16
towards
the
end
of
it.
There
is
this
tweet
down
here
from
Martin
and
Martin.
Just
said:
hey,
like
check
out
what
happened
when
I
have
updated
my
site,
so
that
was
cool
and
then
there
was
some
discussion
in
on
his
tweet.
So
and
you
know
from
hacker
news
and
stuff
and
people
are
like
well,
let's
see
a
real
production
application,
because
that
was
his.
B
That
was
a
personal
site,
so
he
works
at
a
company
called
just
eat,
and
so
he
actually
posted
a
thing
showing
what
happened
when
they
updated
their
production
app
and
it's
a
non-trivial
application.
It
has
a
front-end
web
and
API
tier
that
are
using
ASP
net
core
to
one.
They
have
some
existing
back-end
services
that
are
that
are
on
dotnet
framework,
4
6,
and
so
he
talks
about
you
know
the
process
of
well,
first
of
all,
what
they
used
when
they
updated
the
client,
Factory
and
web
application
Factory.
B
B
A
A
B
A
A
A
You
go
in
and
start
a
call
going
to
start
a
stream
on
YouTube.
You
can,
you
say,
yeah
the
simple
thing:
I
just
use
hangouts
and
then
it
just
kind
of
launches
hangouts
and
you
do
it,
but
because
we're
using
a
proper
live
stream.
There's
a
lot
of
what
the
stuff
has
to
be
set
up.
Manually
I
think
like
in
the
browser
so
I'm
like
fiddling.
A
And
seeing
if
it
updates
in
real
time
so
yeah,
oh
I,
think
I
think
this
is
being
okay,
I,
think
we've
got
something
going
now.
Whether
people
say
you
sound
great,
so
I
actually
turned
off
I
had
my
desktop
audio
was
looping
back
into
the
stream
software
and
so
I
think
somehow
I
had
two
of
your
tracks,
so
I
actually
don't
know
where
your
audio
is
coming
from,
which
is.
B
A
I
didn't
even
get
time
to
fiddle
with
the
OBS
streaming
stuff,
so
I'm
down,
mixing
to
like
only
30
frames,
a
second
and
I'm
only
doing
like
3
megabits
a
second
we
could
do
a
lot
better
like
for
a
1080p
stream.
I
could
bump
that
up
to
like
8
mega.
Second,
it
would
be
even
better,
but
apparently
it's
working
really
well,
don't
you
think
it
looks
really
good
stop
talking
to
him,
but
this
is
obviously
a
huge
improvement
of
what
we've
had
before
the
trick
will
be.
B
A
I
actually
am
showing
my
desktop.
That's
how
they're
seeing
you
like
I,
have
you
running
on
the
Skype
call
on
this
monitor
and
then
I've
told
OBS
to
mirror
your
this
external
display
to
the
stream
as
a
source,
and
then
I
can
flip
between
them.
But
this
stream
desk
thing
stream,
deck
thing,
sorry,
usually
lights
up
with
a
bunch
of
programmable
buttons
and
you'd,
like
you,
can
programmer
to
say,
hit
now
to
stream
and
change
scenes.
Damn
1
2
3
Golnaz
is
in
there
saying
yes,.
A
To
get
it
to
work,
because
you
know
she
owns
this
room,
she
got
this
all
going,
so
I
think
I
think
we're
on
the
road
to
something
really
really
sweet
here.
We
just
need
to
persevere
and
we'll
get
there,
but
I
think
so
far.
We're
seeing
video
look.
Amazing
audio
looks
really
good.
Now
we
just
need
to
get
the
the
direction
and
all
that
sort
of
stuff
going
through.
So
ok.
A
It's
brand-new
like
this
is
literally
launched
like
a
week
and
a
half
ago,
or
something
and
like
it
has
all
this
cool
stuff
to
like
I.
Don't
you
can't
actually
sign
in
shot
at
the
moment,
and
maybe
gülnaz
will
teach
me
how
to
make
the
remove
I,
don't
know
if
I
can,
while
I'm
sitting
here
but
there's
like
paraphernalia
on
the
walls
here.
So
there's
like
you,
can
see
this
bill
gates
book
and
the
saches
book
and
there's
like
a
cabinet
behind
me
with
some
old
Visual
Basic
there's
even
a.
A
A
Really
loudly,
but
there's
actually,
this
actually
boxes
of,
like
like
old,
like
this
powerpoint
for
macintosh,
like
over
here
on
the
wall
and
she's,
actually
gonna
come
in
now
and
try
and
pan
the
camera
so
that
everyone
can
actually
see
what
I'm
talking.
Okay,
it's
like
stuff
look
at
this
and
if
we
were
really
dedicated,
we
could
like
bring
our
own
props
every
week.
Well
have
like
cabinet
I
can
pull
them
out
before
the
show
we
get
like
you
know,
it's
the
it's.
A
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
I've
heard
I've
heard
pretty
good
things
about
them
if,
if
you're
into
that
stuff,
so
the
only
other
thing
I
was
going
to
chat
about
today
was
we
did
push
an
announcement
around
the
plans
for
a
spin.
It
excuse
me
at
laughs
last
week,
I
think
last
week
and
they're
super
high
level,
like
we
don't
have
the
low
level
detail
yet,
but
it's
kind
of
like
brushes
that
sort
of
paints.
The
the
high
level
features
that
we
want
to,
or
scenarios
that
we're
trying
to
tackle.
A
We've
got
some
feedback
around
some
of
them
so
like
the
the
desire
to
have
a
story
to
do.
Api
auth,
as
part
of
the
stack,
is
an
interesting
one.
We've
had
a
couple
of
temps
at
trying
to
solve
this
gap
in
the
last
few
years.
Obviously,
identity
server
is
a
well-established
product
for
supporting
like
all
types
of
stuff
to
let
you
do
that,
but
there
was
a
desire
to
try
and
have
an
experience
there.
A
That
was
perhaps
a
little
simpler
to
get
started,
and
especially
for
kind
of
first
party
scenarios
like
if
I'm
just
using
these
met
core
app
to
an
8-minute
core
app
or
like
exam
or
an
app
to
name
it
core,
app
and
I.
Don't
need
to
support
third
party
applications.
All
you
need
to
support
my
applications.
Talking
to
my
AP
is.
Could
we
make
that
like
really
really
really
smooth,
and
so
we're
actually
talking
to
the
identity
server?
Folks
around
about
that
like
now
so
we're
gonna
have
I.
A
Whether
that's
you
know,
people
on
the
AC
I
mean
it
engineers
on
the
8-minute
team,
helping
to
code
that
you
know:
identity
server,
whether
it's
the
a
subnet
core
team
building,
a
shim
that
kind
of
creates
a
nice
sort
of
low
config
or
zero
config
story.
For
first
part,
EAP
is
that
then
plugs
into
identity,
server
or
something
else
like
we
need
to
figure
those
things
out,
but
we're
having
those
discussions,
you
know
what
we
don't
want
to
do
is
just
build
a
different
thing.
A
If
we
could
avoid
it
right,
if
there's
a
good
solution
out
there
and
it's
it's
well
supported
like
by
the
foundation
or
you
know,
backed
by
a
company-
and
we
can,
we
can
work
with
those
with
that
project
and
that's
what
we
would
prefer
to
do.
So
that's
what
we're
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
solve
right
now.
Other
features
like
Tim
just
asked
about
health
checks,
that's
something
that
we've
been
wanting
to
do
for
a
while
as
well,
which
isn't
the
list.
A
So
we're
gonna
see
how
we
go
on
that
the
often
cited
and
wanted
is
in
process
hosting,
which
we
wanted
to
do
in
two
point
one,
but
god
I
just
did
have
time
to
finish
it.
That
will
be
in
two
point
two.
So
that's
being
worked
on
right
now
and
is
more
highly
funded.
Now
it's
a
complicated
area
to
get
right.
We
want
to
make
sure.
A
Http
API
is
in
a
split
core.
You
know
from
you
know,
producing
open,
API
endpoints
from
from
writing
as
little
code.
So
you
write
your
controllers.
You
don't
want
to
have
to
do.
Buber
attributes
OOP
to
have
them
be
well
descriptive.
So
that's
the
API
convention
stuff
we're
working
on.
Then
you
have
an
endpoint
that
emits
a
swagger
doc
or
an
open,
API
doc.
A
So
we're
looking
at
that
full
end-to-end
and
again
we're
trying
to
figure
out
well,
you
know
what
should
we
be
doing
in
the
product
like
in
the
framework
itself
to
make
that
into
and
work
well
and
then
what
is
there
already
in
the
ecosystem
that
we
could
leverage
or
help
improve
or
recommend
or
whatever,
to
sort
of
make
that
into
and
really
shine?
So
you
know
we're
looking
at
NS
where
we're
looking
at
swashbuckle.
A
We
work
at
the
microsoft
itself
has
auto
arrest,
which
is
a
node
based
tool
for
producing
clients,
it's
used
by
the
azure
sdk.
So
we
obviously
you
to
be
it'd,
be
interesting
to
try
and
integrate
with
that
as
an
option,
so
we're
we're
exploring
that
area
as
well.
I
see
a
bunch
of
folks
like
throwing
out
there
so
yeah,
so
Dan
is
on
holiday
at
the
moment.
Blazer
is
not
gonna
be
in
to
I'm.
A
Sorry,
I
have
to
say
people
know
it's
not
on
the
tootsie
roadmap,
but
we
do
have
some
interesting
things
going
on
over
in
the
Razer
space,
but
that'll
be
more
three.
Oh
and
we'll
have
more
to
share
about
that
and
Faymann.
We
talked
about
that
I
think
in
the
last
show
that
the
Blazer
crew
was
on
and
they
talked
about.
B
A
Showed
the
demo
of
like
blazer
running
remote,
to.net
core
in
electron
yeah
like
the
weird
like
the
server
mode,
where
it's
it's,
it's
still
the
Blazer
engine,
but
it's
actually
server
rendered
and
then
sent
down
to
the
client
rather
than
having
webassembly
in
the
client.
So
that's
an
area
that's
being
explored
as
well
to
figure
out
sort
of
what's
the
roadmap
looking
forward
for
all
the
stuff
that
we've
that
we've
tried
out
on
blazer,
how
do
we
sort
of
turn
that
into
real
things
that
we
can
ship
over?
A
The
next
few
versions
was
the
other
one
that
came
up
here:
Oh
micro
service
template
yeah,
so
the
idea
of
like,
if
you're
building
micro
services,
what
can
we
do
to
make
that
simpler
now
that?
Well
it's
an
interesting
discussion,
there's
obviously
a
lot
of
customers
who
are
being
super
successful,
building
micro
services
and
don't
they
call
today
like
we
know
because
we've
talked
to
them,
but
to
do
that?
There's
a
lot
of
concerns
that
come
up
with
regards
to
one
yeah.
A
One
is
probably
not
the
right
thing
to
do,
and
so
we're
working
through
like
Glen
sort
of
owns
s
you
know
in
in
on
our
on
our
team,
is
figuring
out
like
what's
the
right
approach
here,
to
really
help
customers
be
successful,
building
micro
services
using
a
spinet,
core
and
dotnet
call,
and
so
there's
a
bunch
of
stuff
that
you're
some
incremental
improvements
that
we've
been
doing
and
then
there's
some
bigger
things
that
we
need
to
figure
out.
What
are
those
things
might
be?
A
A
template,
one
of
those
things
might
be
a
set
of
templates
or
a
set
of
scaffolds
and
some
documents
documentation
and
some
tooling
and
some
other
things
that
help
you
go
from
nothing
to
I.
Have
this
large
distributed
application
with
a
you
know,
a
couple
of
micro
services
for
doing
X,
Y
and
some
process
that
does
background
processing
and
like
a
message,
barsen
data
of
about
which
you
know
we're
getting
well
beyond.
Just
like.
Oh
it's
a
web
framework
and
it's
bits
of
HTML
or
jason.
A
Now
it's
a
much
rather
you
know
it's
about
so
much
bigger
consume.
We
have
to
deal
with
so
we're
thinking
about
all
the
different
ways
that
we
can.
We
can
look
at
that
as
well.
I
think
an
ef-2
to
to
they're
looking
at
doing
the
cosmos
DB
provider
for
EF,
which
I
know
a
lot
of
folks.
A
lot
of
folks
are
excited
about
which
is
cool
and
then
there's
probably
some
other
stuff,
I'm
forgetting,
but
all
that
stuff
is
well
underway.
A
So
if
folks
want
to
go
and
get
involved
from
the
open
source
side,
you
can
check
out
the
repos
themselves
as
issues
created
and
work
happening
on
most
of
those
things
o
HTTP
to
finally
coming
in
kestrel
as
well,
which
will
be
great
and
we're
hoping
to
get
a
start
on
h-2b
to
in
the
client
as
well,
so
that
with
h-2b
client
you'd
be
able
to
get
h
to
be
to
support
as
well,
which
would
be
fantastic
so
and
then
for
three.
Oh,
we
don't
really
have
we're
doing
that
planning
right
now.
A
Cuz
300
is
obviously
a
little
bit
further
out
and
we're
all
pretty
busy
building
to
2
right
now,
but
free
sui
net
core.
There
are
folks
looking
at
listing
out
a
whole
bunch
of
potential
things
or
sort
of
proposed
things
for
3,
oh
and
then
we'll
have
to
go
through
a
process
of
actually
trimming
that
down
and
deciding
and
prioritizing
all
that
type
of
stuff
say
but
yeah
to
to
is
the
is
the
next
best
thing.
The
next
big
thing
I
should
say
if.
B
A
What
what's
a
good
way
to
for
some
of
them,
like
so
I
mean
if
you
I
mean
obviously
first
thing
I
would
say,
is
search,
and
if
you
find
something,
that's
something
that
you'd
want
in
that
timeframe,
then
by
all
means
you
know,
comment
on
it
or
I'll
vote
it
up.
If
you
don't
find
it
then
plug
it
in
so
this
is
and
just
try
and
give
us
as
much
information
about
why
it's
important
I'm,
you
know.
One
of
the
things,
as
always
we've
talked
about
before
is,
is
owning
a
platform
like
this.
B
A
That
work
on
this
stuff
we
have
to
in
like
three
Oh
seems
like
a
long
way
away
like
you
know,
we're
gonna
ship
it
next
year
sometime,
but
you
know
we
have
to
ship
to
two
before
that
and
we
have
to
do
previews
and
we
have
to
service
all
the
other
stuff.
So
we're
still
quite
busy.
You
know
triaging
and
fixing
bugs
in
one
1
1
and
200
and
2
1
now,
so
we
actually
have
four
versions
of
Vaisman
air
core
that
we're
and.net
core
that
we
have
to
service
right
now.
A
Some
folks
will
have
heard
that
we
announced
the
end
of
life
of
oh,
so
it
could.
As
a
result
of
one
coming
out,
one
became
the
current
release
and
the
the
dotnet
core
support
policy
stipulates
that
when
the
next
current
release
comes
out,
the
previous
current,
the
clock
starts
ticking
and
that's
a
three
month
window,
but
we
had
a
couple
of
blocking
issues
that
were
preventing
people
from
moving
to
2.1,
so
we
actually
added
a
month
to
that
window.
So,
oh
we'll
end
of
life
in
October,
but
up
until
then
we
continued.
A
You
know
we
have
to
support
it,
so
we
have
to
you,
know
people
log
issues
or
there
and
we
do
investigations
and
we
do
that.
It
fits
into
our
monthly
servicing
yeah
patch
cycle
that
we
do
so
yeah
we've
already
done
a211
we
had
that
release
in
June
it's
now
July.
There
will
probably
be
a
servicing
release
this
month
and
there
will
definitely
be
a
servicing
released
next
month
and
again,
all
that
work
is
pretty
public.
So
you
folks
are
interested
in.
A
What's
coming
down
the
pipe
for
the
next
servicing
release,
they
can
go
and
see
those
issues
and
those
branches
on
the
dotnet
and
a
spinet
and
EF
repos,
and
look
at
the
bugs
that
are
actually
being
fixed
for
servicing,
and
so
that's
if
we
have
a
monthly
servicing
release,
and
so
you
can
expect
those
features,
are
those
bugs
sorry
to
come.
Bug
fixes
to
come
through
fairly
quickly,
but
it
is
you
know,
it's
complicated
people
can
probably
imagine
they're
having
to
think
about
developing
the
next.
A
You
know
2.2,
while
also
thinking
about
3.0,
while
also
thinking
about
patching
four
simultaneous
versions
in
the
meantime
is
fairly
expensive,
but
that's
part
of
the
product.
That's
part
of
one
of
the
reasons
why
folks
choose
things
like
nez,
because
yeah
we
have
these
support
policies
and
you
can
get
things
fixed
without
having
to
wait.
You
know
six
months
or
a
year
for
the
next
release,
so
that's
just
part
and
parcel
what's
valuable.
A
Limit
is
going
to
be
five
o'clock,
so
then
we
can
probably
end
up
question
from
al
309
one.
How
is
the
work
unifying
web
host
and
generic
host
going?
It's
not
right.
Now,
the
fact
the
question
came
up
today.
We
had
a
I
was
in
a
meeting
quickly
today
about
300
planning,
and
that
was
a
question
that
David
and
Glenn
passed.
So
we
there
is
a
desire
to
do
something.
It'll
happen
in
the
3o
timeframe.
A
We're
not
exactly
sure
what
yet
whether
we
change
the
EDM
to
all
be
generic
hosts
that
if
you
build
a
new
web
app
in
3o,
it
would
use
the
generic
host,
but
the
web
host
API
is
still
there
so
obviously
but
I'm
going
to
break
you.
So
if
you
upgrade
from
two
to
three
we're
not
going
to
just
remove
the
API,
the
other
option
is
we
rebuild
the
web
host
API
on
top
of
generic
host,
but
we
haven't
figured
that
out
yet.
A
Next
one
any
progress
on
typescript,
a
c-sharp
converter
for
accessing
browser,
api's
and
laser
sorry,
I,
don't
know
anything
about
blazer
progress
today
on
that.
Is
it
possible
to
access
a
signal,
a
hub,
VAR,
f,
pure
web,
socket
from
Zusi?
Yes,
it
is
possible.
The
thing
is,
you
do
need
a
bit
of
code
to
speak
the
hub
protocol,
okay,
so
even
you
you
can
establish
a
signaler
connection
over
a
pure
web
socket.
A
A
That
knows
how
to
parse
the
incoming
messages
that
are
hub
messages
and
knows
how
to
send
them
back
to
the
server
that
code
is
in
the
signal,
client,
so
I
believe
there
are
samples
around
where
you
can
use
a
signaler
client
like
the
JavaScript
client,
and
then
you
can
initialize
a
WebSocket
call
separately,
and
then
you
can
pass
that
in
to
one
of
the
signal
client
layers
to
do
that.
So
it
is
possible.
A
I,
don't
know
if
there's
Doc's
specifically
on
how
to
do
that
yet
doing
it
from
c-sharp,
I'm,
not
sure
I,
think
the
clients
factored
the
same
way.
I'd
have
to
ask
some
folks
on
the
signal
our
team
someone
has
asked:
where
did
the
universe
come
from
beyond
my
beyond
my
paygrade
they're?
Talking
about
that.
B
A
A
I'd
say
that
2.1
is
certainly
and
the
latest
releases
the
best
one
to
start
with,
if
you're
looking
at
moving
but
it'll
all
come
down
to
what
type
of
app
you're
building
and
what
type
of
API
is
you
depend
on
and
where
you
want
to
run
and
all
those
type
of
benefits
question.
Why
is
300
called
300
I?
Guess
there
is
some
major
breaking
change
or
deprecated
stuff
is
removed?
A
A
So
in
this
case
it
also
says
that
sometimes
you
know
we
it's
common
to
represent
a
major
number
or
sorry.
It's
common
to
use
the
major
number
change:
it's
not
only
for
a
breaking
change,
but
just
a
large
set
of
changes
landing
at
once
in
the
case
of
net
core.
You
know
we
had
the
wave,
don't
they
call
one
the
way
it
was
really
about
establishing
cross-platform
net,
getting
a
spinet
core
running,
and
you
know
really
targeting
those
new
those
workloads.
Dotnet
core
2
was
about
sharing
code,
and
so
we
hadn't
done
it
standard
2.
A
We
built
the
understand,
don't
know
standard
library
and
we
added
hot
about
back
a
whole
bunch
of
api's
that
made
it
easier
to
share
code
between
different
nets
while
continuing
to
move
forward
on
the
HP
net
core
workload.
Donath
core
3
is
really
all
about
desktop.
It's
really
about
adding
back
those
desktop
workloads
and
that's
going
to
be
a
large
enough
change
that
it
warrants
calling.
You
know
the
next
version
of
version,
3
they're
very
likely
be
a
net
standard
version
change
as
well.
I
think
there
was
a
meaning
about
that
earlier
today.
A
So
we'll
hear
more
about
that
in
the
coming
weeks
and
months,
and
there
will
be
some
eight-minute
court
changes
in
tech
or
3
as
well.
Obviously,
but
the
all
of
the
big
thing
that's
landing,
as
was
announced
to
build
this
year,
is
obviously
the
desktop
workloads.
The
camera
is
moving
so
for
the
folks
that
are
asking
is
the
camera.
It
is
it's
on
a
beam,
and
it
literally
is
going
like
this
very
slowly
from
side
to
side
like
a
very
long
tracking,
it's
quite
artistic.
Apparently
it's
making
people
seasick,
okay,
that
is
so
there.
A
A
Yeah,
that's
my
understanding,
yeah
and
there
was
a
I
think
there
was
a
prototype
demo
done
at
one
point
a
while
ago,
which
got
some
folks
excited
about
it,
and
then
it
didn't
matter
it
didn't
land
into
point
one.
But
my
understanding
is
it
is
in
the
EF
plans
for
two
point:
two
well
cool
all
right.
Well,
it
is
459
and
I.
Think
yeah
spend
enough
time
today,
futzing
around
so.
B
A
A
Do
something
different
I'm
gonna
see
if
I
can
make
this
work,
see
if
it
works,
she's
gonna,
just
actually
stopping
the
pain,
I'm
gonna
see
if
this
works,
oh,
oh
and
what's
what's
interesting
about
this
dramatic
zoom
out,
is
that
you
will
appear
in
my
place
behind
me.
Look,
oh
so
I
zoomed
out
and
then
you're,
just
really
big.
Oh.