Speaker

Matthew Burleigh

Matthew Burleigh

Software Development Manager, Bally Sports

Baltimore, Maryland, United States

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Matt wrote his first program in Fortran on a card punch machine in the early 80s. He survived the experience and moved on to use Toolbook, Delphi, VB, and finally the .Net framework for the last 15 years. He still gets twitchy when someone mentions DCOM or CORBA and doesn't want to get into a discussion about where curly braces should go.

He is currently a Software Development Manager at Bally Sports focusing on Azure; previously he was a Senior Developer at Pandora Jewelry and a Lead Developer at Constellation/Exelon.

Area of Expertise

  • Energy & Basic Resources
  • Finance & Banking
  • Information & Communications Technology
  • Region & Country

Topics

  • C#
  • Azure DevOps
  • Microsoft Azure
  • REST API
  • Blazor
  • Azure DevOps Pipelines

Notebooks in VS Code

Jupyter or Polyglot? C#, F#, SQL, Python, PowerShell - oh my!
Notebooks are a great way to POC some code, write utilities, living documentation, and share ideas with your team.

Come see what notebooks are all about and how you can use VS Code (and Azure Data Studio) to create them.

VS Code All the Things!!!

Did you know that you can query your database from VS Code? Or make REST requests? Or manage your Azure functions/storage accounts/app services? Or replace OneNote? The extensibility model of VS Code & the passion of developers around the world means that VS Code can be the Swiss army knife in your dev toolkit. Come by and be amazed at what this simple little IDE can do with the right extensions!

Azure Without the Portal

Most everything you can do in the Azure Portal can also be done via the REST API, PowerShell, or the AZ command line tools. This session will show you how to set up scripts to automate common tasks, manipulate Azure resources from a DevOps pipeline, generate ad-hoc reports, and amaze your friends by making Azure bow to your will.

Level Up Azure DevOps Pipelines with YAML

CI/CD pipelines are core to good DevOps practices. So is infrastructure as code. This session will show you how to use the YAML support in Azure DevOps to define your pipelines and how YAML pipelines compare to the classic pipelines.

You'll see how to convert a classic pipeline to YAML, how to set up CI/CD, approvals, parameterized templates that can be shared across projects or teams, and how the tooling has matured to make YAML a viable alternative to the classic pipelines.

Matthew Burleigh

Software Development Manager, Bally Sports

Baltimore, Maryland, United States

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