Joseph Landes and Amol Dalvi on Windows Virtual Desktop - Episode 82

Joseph Landes and Amol Dalvi on Windows Virtual Desktop - Episode 82

In today’s episode, Jeffrey is speaking with two guests, Joseph Landes, the Chief Revenue Officer at Nerdio, and Amol Dalvi, the Vice President of Product Management Nerdio. They both do a lot with Azure and have implemented Windows Virtual Desktop into their work.

Amol and Joseph have some interesting learnings around using Windows Virtual Desktop in Azure for standardized development desktops — which is what they’ll be discussing today! Amol and Joseph share their insights on how they use Windows Virtual Desktop, give their advice regarding it, and share some of their personal experiences with it. You won’t want to miss out if you’ve been interested in learning more about Windows Virtual Desktop and its capabilities!

Topics of Discussion:

[:40] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes.

[:49] About Jeffrey’s upcoming .NET DevOps Bootcamp in Austin, Texas on April 30th and his free 30-point DevOps inspection.

[1:21] About today’s episode and featured guests!

[1:54] Jeffrey welcomes Joseph and Amol to the show!

[2:01] Joseph shares what led up to him working in this field.

[3:18] Amol shares his career background.

[4:21] Amol speaks about the sizeable development team that he runs and where they’re located around the world.

[5:09] How Amol is making heavy use of Windows Virtual Desktop for everyone on his team.

[6:11] What Windows Virtual Desktop in Azure is!

[9:34] How is Windows Virtual Desktop from the old terminal sever in terms of allowing people to have a remote desktop session?

[11:03] If a small development team with 4 developers wants to have their own Visual Studio image and all use the same thing, how would they get started?

[12:34] With a small team (such as 2-4 developers) is it possible to use Windows Virtual Desktop without a third-party solution?

[13:28] Does Microsoft only market Windows Virtual Desktop for teams of a certain size? Is it not worth using for smaller teams? Or does it have some uses for smaller teams?

[15:05] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure.

[15:31] Jeffrey gives some quick announcements.

[17:22] Using Windows Virtual Desktop without a third-party solution: what does it look like to shut it down at night?

[17:51] When configuring the image, what is the process to actually set up Windows the way it needs to be?

[19:30] Would Amol agree with the sentiment that this solution is geared mainly towards really large groups?

[20:37] How many VMs do developer share? What is the ratio that Amol has found that works best for him?

[22:36] How much ram does Amol try to allocate?

[23:45] At this point, is premium solid-state the commodity that’s expected?

[24:08] What’s the experience like for a developer at their desk? What kind of computer would act as their terminal?

[25:25] Is it literally the Windows Remote Desktop client that is being opened across all three of the monitors?

[26:04] If you need to access your virtual workstation can you access it anywhere that supports RDS?

[26:32] Amol highlights use cases beyond those for developers.

[27:26] Are developers with expensive computers like MacBook Pros just used as terminals? Or is the development distributed between the Virtual Desktop and the actual host computer?

[28:32] Are the computers that Amol’s developers use are their own personal computers?

[30:23] How much does Microsoft charge for Windows Virtual Desktop?

[32:09] What VM code has Amol landed on for his developers?

[34:04] Jeffrey thanks Joseph and Amol for joining the podcast!

[34:15] Joseph gives his recommendations on what to check out if you want to learn more about Windows Virtual Desktop.

[34:51] Amol recommends some of his go-to resources!

[35:48] Jeffrey thanks Amol and Joseph once again for joining the podcast!

Mentioned in this Episode:

Azure DevOps

Clear Measure (Sponsor)

.NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon!

bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook!

bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events!

Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube

Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter Follow to stay informed about future events!

Jeffrey@Clear-Measure.com — Email Jeffrey for a free 30-point DevOps inspection (regularly priced at $5000!) — Spaces are limited!

Joseph Landes

Nerdio

Amol Dalvi

Azure Calculator

Want to Learn More?

Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

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Michael Washington: Azure OpenAI - Episode 286

Michael Washington: Azure OpenAI - Episode 286

Michael is an ASP.NET and C# programmer who has extensive knowledge in process improvement, AI and Large Language Models, and student information systems. He also is the founder of two websites — AIStoryBuilders.com and BlazorHelpWebsite.com — both fantastic resources that help empower developers. Michael resides in Los Angeles, California, with his son Zachary and wife, Valerie.   Topics of Discussion: [3:14] Michael talks about his career path. [5:15] AIStoryBuilders.com. [6:21] The vision for his book and what sets it apart from others. [9:10] What is “RAG”? Retrieval augmented generation. [12:35] How did Michael come up with the AI Story Builders name? [14:09] Keeping AI on track despite the limitations. [17:44] Models behave better when trained on more data. [21:26] How do you make the decision on which named model to use? [34:05] Where Microsoft is a leader.   Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Azure OpenAI Using C# Michael Washington GitHub AI Story Builders Adefwebserver Blazor-Blogs   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

26 Feb 202438min

Kent Beck: Tidy First - Episode 285

Kent Beck: Tidy First - Episode 285

Original signer of the Agile Manifesto, author of the Extreme Programming book series, rediscoverer of Test-Driven Development, and inspiring Keynote Speaker. I read his TDD book 20 years ago.   Topics of Discussion: [4:06] What led Kent into extreme programming, and realizing that technical mastery alone is not enough for project success. [6:24] The significance of extreme programming. [9:15] The Agile Manifesto. [10:46] The importance of taking responsibility seriously. [14:06] What was the inspiration behind Tidy First? [16:27] Why software design is an important skill. [17:31] The human aspect dominates in design. [19:40] You can make large changes in small safe steps. [23:09] Normalizing symmetry. [30:17] Preserving flexibility in design through empirical and reversible changes rather than rather than speculative or reactive design. [31:51] Kent’s experimentation with the GPT phase of AI on publications. [32:11] Rent-A-Kent to get better answers around software development. [37:19] Advice for young programmers.   Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Rent-A-Kent Tidy First? by Kent Beck Test Driven Development, by Kent Beck Extreme Programming Explained, by Kent Beck with Cynthia Andres Implementation Patterns, by Kent Beck   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

19 Feb 202440min

Paul Yuknewicz: Cloud Native & Serverless - Episode 284

Paul Yuknewicz: Cloud Native & Serverless - Episode 284

Paul Yuknewicz is a Lead Product Manager for Azure Developer Experience at Microsoft; he is responsible for the PM team that designs the developer experience for building and diagnosing cloud-native applications for Azure. In his role, he’s very passionate about helping developers succeed in building high-scale distributed applications and building strong collaboration with customers. He has fun learning and challenging the status quo in a breadth of technologies and languages, like Linux, Windows, Java, .NET, Serverless, containers, service meshes, and application observability. He speaks at industry conferences not only at Microsoft but also at conferences like DEVintersection, TechBash, and more.   Topics of Discussion: [4:40] Paul talks about his career evolution. [5:28] Working in SharePoint, Azure, and then in the microservices field. [6:44] DAPR, distributed application runtime. [8:06] The power of the open source world. [8:33] What is Serverless? [11:08] The evolution of their work in AI. [12:05] The concept of Serverless vs. developing in a microservices fashion. [15:17] Why Paul thinks containers are great. [18:16] Who Serverless is good for. [20:01] Serverless architecture and cost savings. [23:55] Container apps. [28:31] The tactical process behind Dapper. [34:41] Container apps environment.   Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Paul Twitter Paul Github “Paul Yuknewicz on Azure Development Ep #136”   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

12 Feb 202438min

Uncle Bob Martin: Clean Code and How to Do Software Well  - Episode 283

Uncle Bob Martin: Clean Code and How to Do Software Well - Episode 283

If you don’t already know Bob, he is a software engineer, instructor, and best-selling author. He is most recognized for developing numerous software design principles and for being a founder of the incredibly influential Agile Manifesto. Bob is the author of a number of Clean Code related books including his latest, Clean Agile: Back to Basics, where he reintroduces Agile values and principles for a new generation of programmers and nonprogrammers alike. In the past, Bob was also the editor-in-chief of C++ Report magazine and served as the first chairman of the Agile Alliance.   Topics of Discussion: [3:48] Why the term “clean” when it comes to software?  [5:16] Are people still writing “dirty” software?  [7:06] it is the developers job to maintain quality, and pretending to go fast by rushing is not a viable solution.  [9:54] Uncle Bob’s upcoming book on the history of programmers.  [11:00] The first era of programmers may be the scribes of Egypt.  [15:00] How Uncle Bob went about organizing the book into different eras of programmers.  [18:10] A short backstory about Grace Hopper.  [23:33] Uncle Bob’s other new book which is out now, Functional Design.  [24:54] Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs  [28:37] Does functionality have a concise set of principles?  [33:11] Where are the shifts happening?  [34:01] The loss of Moore’s Law.  [37:33] What will be the winning strategies as we prepare for a few years where things grow, but not as quickly as they have, and we sit on a plateau?  [40:51] Make it right, then you can make it fast.    Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!  Previous episode with Uncle Bob Functional Design  Clean Coders .NET Developer Apprentice - Texas Clean Agile    Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

5 Feb 202441min

Greg Leonardo: Optimizing Cloud Budgets in Azure - Episode 282

Greg Leonardo: Optimizing Cloud Budgets in Azure - Episode 282

Greg is a Cloud Architect that assists organizations with cloud adoption and innovation and is currently a Cloud Architect and the owner of Webonology. He has been working in the IT industry since his time in the military and is a developer, teacher, speaker, and early adopter. Greg has worked in many facets of IT throughout his career and is currently the president of TampaDev, a community meetup that runs #TampaCC and various technology events throughout Tampa. Greg holds a certification as a Microsoft Certified Azure Solutions Architect Expert, and Microsoft Certified Trainer, and is an Azure MVP.   Topics of Discussion: [3:49] What has been Greg’s secret sauce to success? Helping others. [4:53] Optimizing Azure budgets. [7:12] The cloud shines in replatforming or rehosting. [9:12] To Greg, a lot of the cost optimization really focuses on architectural optimization. [13:58] The importance of looking at evolution and realizing that technology doesn’t stop at the cloud. [18:35] Don’t blame technology for your shortcomings. [23:31] Azure services surprise people with their cost, and the need to go into things with eyes wide open. [29:21] The problem with the pricing calculator. [35:47] The two-fold problem with present-day containers. [37:02] Privatized workloads. [40:08] How the cloud can make our lives easier and enhance what we are already doing. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!  Ep 250: Responsible AI with Greg Leonardo Greg Leonardo — Cloud Daily Wire      Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

29 Jan 202441min

Andrew Lock: Containers in .NET 8 - Episode 281

Andrew Lock: Containers in .NET 8 - Episode 281

Andrew Lock is a senior software engineer at Datadog, working out of Devon, in the UK. He is a Microsoft MVP, Author of ASP.NET Core in Action, and has an active blog all about his experience working with .NET and ASP.NET Core.   Topics of Discussion: [3:08] What is Andrew working on these days? [3:42] The push towards open telemetry in .NET and the ecosystem in general. [4:49] In Andrew’s opinion, open telemetry is ready for use, but there is still much to learn. [6:58] The state of containers for .NET developers. [9:48] The use of chiseled containers. [15:46] Using chiseled containers for that extra level of security. [17:01] The different levels of chiseling. [19:04] What does it mean to be a self-contained ASP.NET application? [23:52] Other big container changes, including running as a non-root user and the default port inside the Docker container changing. [28:18] Port 8080 and the user App. [30:12] Windows containers for testing. [33:14] The repeatability of Dockers containers. Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Andrew Lock “Ep 198: Andrew Luck: Web Applications in Net6” Updates to Docker Images in .NET8   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

22 Jan 202436min

Scott Hanselman: Semantic Kernel - Episode 280

Scott Hanselman: Semantic Kernel - Episode 280

Scott Hanselman is a teacher at heart. He speaks all over to whoever will listen. He's written code that you, dear listener, has used. Scott has been blogging, coding, and podcasting a LONG time. He codes, writes, speaks, empowers, promotes, braids, learns and listens - usually not in that order. And he's a Vice President at Microsoft in his day job. You can find him on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, and Mastodon! His Hanselminutes podcast has surpassed 900 episodes, and his Azure Friday show, over 750 episodes.    Topics of Discussion: [4:33] What should developers be focusing on?  [625] Understanding the complexity of AI development.  [8:09] Without understanding context, we can’t make good prompts.  [8:42] What are the levels of the pyramid that every developer should understand?  [9:16] Developers should start by learning the basics of AI.  [9:22] The question of who is responsible when a website or model goes down.  [14:15] Grounding your AI in reality.  [15:19] Edge deployed AI model.  [17:00] A foundational model is a machine learning model that has been pre-trained on a data set.  [20:40] The limitations of large language models.  [21:00] AI transformer models and their growth in size and complexity.  [21:46] Conversation with John Maeda at the .NET Conf on Semantic Kernel.  [22:02] Integrating these large language models into conventional programming languages. [23:08] A few exciting and actionable features of semantic kernel.  [28:18] Concerns about data privacy in smart homes.  [29:07] Advice for developers looking to jump into semantic kernel.    Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Scott Hanselman Hanselminutes    Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

15 Jan 202431min

2024 Kickoff - Episode 279

2024 Kickoff - Episode 279

Welcome to 2024. It’s going to be a great year in .NET, in Azure, and with DevOps. To kick things off, I wanted to review some of the big things you’ll want to look at in 2024. To do that, I’m airing a piece I recorded reviewing the highlights from .NET Conf looking at it from an architectural perspective. There are so many updates, but in this piece, I interpret the architectural thinking you’ll undergo as you implement the new bits. So, Happy New Year, and I’ll roll the piece.   Topics of Discussion: [:14] Jeffrey is looking for his next software engineering apprentice. [5:44] The biggest architectural change in Maui is going to a single project system. [7:34] When you should do a proof of concept. [9:59] What is the architectural significance of the semantic kernel? [13:40] Cloud Native. [13:46] Microsoft is giving us the building blocks so that we can create our own GPT Program. [16:19] Training and use of the right library. [18:11] Health checks are essential for monitoring dependencies in an application. [23:03] Containers. [28:11] How do you know if AOT is for you? [29:25] .NET Aspire’s biggest architectural opportunities. [32:07] In Blazor, the biggest news architecturally and the biggest impact on your team is the ability to develop any type of application with just one developer skill set, design patterns, and programming model. [38:22] In C#, class-level parameters are going to change your game. [43:15] The importance of continuous integration and environment types for .NET applications in 2024.   Mentioned in this Episode: Clear Measure Way Architect Forum Software Engineer Forum Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at programming@palermo.net. Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

8 Jan 202444min

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