In episode 107 of the Office 365 Developer Podcast, Andrew Coates talks with Max Knor, Microsoft program manager, about Dev Ops in an Office Developer context.


Weekly update

Dev Ops related


Azure Resource Manager Template Visualisation with ARMVIZ by Tobias Zimmerman
Office IT Pro Deployment Scripts on GitHub
SharePointPnP.PowerShell Commands on GitHub
Extending SharePoint Framework build process with custom tasks by Waldek Mastykarz
www.sharepointnutsandbolts.com by Chris O’Brien

SharePoint Framework related


How to use SharePoint Framework’s preconfigured entries by Waldek Mastykarz
Why bundling external frameworks in SharePoint Framework client-side web parts is a bad idea by WaldekMastykarz
Consider this before deploying your next SharePoint Framework solution by Waldek Mastykarz
SharePoint Framework client-side web part samples and tutorial materials on GitHub
ReactJS Components: Learning the Basics by Chris Nwamba
New Home for SharePoint Framework on dev.office.com on dev.office.com/SharePoint
SharePoint Framework Developer Preview Drop 2 Release Notes on GitHub
SharePoint Developer Hub now available by SharePoint Dev team
Use Custom Gulp tasks in the SharePoint Framework by Stefan Bauer
SharePoint PnP webcast: Getting started with SharePoint webhooks  
Webinar Recording/Slides: Deep Dive to Development using SharePoint Framework with Vesa Juvonen

 Other Office Dev related


Think You Know What’s in Office 365? Think Again. by Benjamin Naiulin
Microsoft MVP Led TechDays Online September 12-16
Authenticate Your Mobile Apps Using Microsoft Authentication Library by Mayur Tendulkar
Microsoft Ignite 2016 Session BRK 3114: Create cross-platform mobile apps with Xamarin that connect to Office Services by Fabian Williams
Microsoft and Mercedes bring your office calendar to your car on Engadget 

Show notes
Max Knor’s blog
Installing Outlook add-ins as part of your build definition by Simon Jäger
VSTS Build Tasks for Office: Outlook Mail add-ins by Max Knor
In the VSTS Marketplace
On Github

Applying Dev Ops principles to Office add-In development by Max Knor
GitVersion on GitHub

Got questions or comments about the show? Join the O365 Dev Podcast on the Office 365 Technical Network. The podcast RSS is available on iTunes or search for it at “Office 365 Developer Podcast” or add directly with the RSS feeds.feedburner.com/Office365DeveloperPodcast.


About Max Knor

Max Knor is a Senior Program Manager at Microsoft. He spends life travelling the world supporting Global ISVs with the implementation of Azure-based cloud solutions. He does a lot of Continuous Delivery, Docker Containers, Automation, Service Fabric and DevOps these days. And loves building home-automation systems with Arduino. Visit his blog at blog.knor.net


About the hosts

Richard is a software engineer in Microsoft’s Developer Experience (DX) group, where he helps developers and software vendors maximize their use of Microsoft cloud services in Office 365 and Azure. Richard has spent a good portion of the last decade architecting Office-centric solutions, many that span Microsoft’s diverse technology portfolio. He is a passionate technology evangelist and a frequent speaker at worldwide conferences, trainings and events. Richard is highly active in the Office 365 community, popular blogger at aka.ms/richdizz and can be found on Twitter at @richdizz. Richard is born, raised and based in Dallas, TX, but works on a worldwide team based in Redmond. Richard is an avid builder of things (BoT), musician and lightning-fast runner.


 


A Civil Engineer by training and a software developer by profession, Andrew Coates has been a Developer Evangelist at Microsoft since early 2004, teaching, learning and sharing coding techniques. During that time, he’s focused on .Net development on the desktop, in the cloud, on the web, on mobile devices and most recently for Office. Andrew has a number of apps in various stores and generally has far too much fun doing his job to honestly be able to call it work. Andrew lives in Sydney, Australia with his wife and two almost-grown-up children and is a cricket umpire in his spare time. Andrew sometimes blogs at aka.ms/coatsy and you can find him on Twitter at @coatsy

Twitter Mentions