Working with AI at scale requires that you use models and their APIs like any other components in a software development stack.
Code without writing code in GitHub’s AI-powered application development platform.
Microsoft’s flagship cloud-native database is now ready for analysis at scale, ideal for enterprise AI applications.
Build Microsoft’s container Linux into your cloud-native workflows and even run it in Windows Subsystem for Linux. Here’s how.
Microsoft’s new open-source tool kit offers a way to assemble lightweight and secure Model Context Protocol servers from WebAssembly components.
The Agent2Agent communication protocol simplifies the development of self-orchestrating agentic workflows. Start building them with the new A2A .NET SDK.
Microsoft’s tools for monitoring virtual machines bridge the cloud and the underlying data centers.
The future of AI is on the edge. The tiny Mu model is how Microsoft is building its new Windows agents.
The latest release of Microsoft’s cloud-native development tool simplifies necessary platform work so you can quickly stand up a development environment. It’s well worth trying out.
Microsoft and partners are building an open toolkit to add natural language interfaces to web content, using the Model Context Protocol to serve both humans and AI agents.
Build AI into your enterprise content and knowledge management platform with 5 APIs that help you base your AI on enterprise data and speed up development.
Microsoft prepares for security in a world where our old codes are easily broken. Get familiar with these technologies now before they become necessary.
Why use expensive AI inferencing services in the cloud when you can use a small language model in your web browser?
Microsoft delivers another internal AI tool for the rest of us that adds agents to workflows and site reliability engineering.
Microsoft’s data lakes meet the industrial internet of things, helping you create complex models with data from multiple sources.
Windows AI Foundry supersedes Windows Copilot Runtime, as Microsoft doubles down on delivering AI-powered applications on Windows.
Microsoft is experimenting with new APIs to link the web to assistive technologies, widening the reach of our code.
Microsoft delivers another piece of its Copilot Runtime: an Arm version of the popular AI development framework.
Microsoft is rapidly rolling out support for MCP across its Azure cloud services and its AI development tools.
Can we treat front ends like microservices? Microsoft’s web frameworks and libraries lay the groundwork for a new generation of web applications.
The new, extensible UI for managing Kubernetes deployments bridges the divide between developers and platform engineers.
Conversational data agents in Microsoft’s big data platform bring enterprise data and insights into AI-powered business processes.
Microsoft doubles down on its serverless ambitions with a new version of its micro-VM host that runs WebAssembly workloads.
Microsoft is sunsetting its own Kubernetes WebAssembly node pools feature in May and recommending two different options.
A new native compiler based on Go is 10x faster than the current TypeScript compiler, promising significant improvements in tools, developer experience, and developer productivity.
Uno Studio’s preview of its new Hot Design tool makes working with live XAML a convenient, interactive process for designers and developers.
Microsoft has rolled out the first preview of .NET 10, with improvements to the runtime, ASP.NET Core, APIs, and developer productivity.
Microsoft steers its agentic AI development kit toward complex workflows using the Agent Framework and no-code agent development using AutoGen.
After many years of work, Microsoft has unveiled its first quantum hardware, the Majorana 1 processor. Let’s grok its topoconductor and tetron-based qubits.
Microsoft has finally delivered an experimental release of the Windows App SDK with artificial intelligence APIs. I took it for a spin.
Open source messaging tools find a home in .NET distributed applications. NATS makes it easier for the messages of at-scale applications to work with various service endpoints.
Standalone document-oriented database gives developers an open-source alternative to MongoDB now and perhaps an industry standard NoSQL API and engine later.
Capture and analyze the system call and log activity of your cloud-based Linux containers using a new tool based on the familiar Wireshark.
Project Kiota uses OpenAPI definitions to automate API client development, using the languages and toolchains you prefer.
Build smaller microservices with a flexible, easy to use way to build HTTP APIs without excess overhead.
Microsoft Azure’s new AI toolkit makes it easy to customize OpenAI large language models for your applications.
Azure’s new fully managed, in-memory database service based on Redis Enterprise brings capabilities and performance beyond its Azure Cache for Redis offering.
Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich’s annual presentation on Azure hardware revealed a lot about the future of Microsoft’s cloud.
Microsoft’s new generative AI-powered, multimodal, content analysis service is a next-generation version of its existing Cognitive Services platform.
Microsoft uses Ignite 2024 to set out its vision for agentic AI in business.
Microsoft’s launch of Azure AI Foundry at Ignite 2024 signals a welcome shift from chatbots to agents and to using AI for business process automation.
Microsoft is making its Rust-based, functions-focused VM tool available on Azure at last, ready to help event-driven applications at scale.
GitHub and Microsoft have taken their AI-powered programming assistant into new territories, tackling code reviews, simple web apps, Java upgrades, and Azure help and troubleshooting.
Microsoft is building Azure’s secure virtual infrastructure in public, a step toward expanding trusted execution.
Microsoft’s own Arm hardware is now available on the Azure cloud, ready to offer power savings and higher density.
Microsoft bundles open source security and observability tools for its managed cloud-native platform.
Microsoft’s open-source data change processing platform promises a whole new way of building and managing cloud applications that generate a constant flow of events.
Microsoft is protecting Recall’s vector indexes in trusted execution environments. It adds a bit of computational overhead, but is a must for data security.
Microsoft’s API management service just passed 10 years, 35,000 customers, and 2 million managed APIs. What have we learned, and what’s in store for the future?
Microsoft’s new UWP-friendly tools bridge the gap between the old and the new worlds of .NET to help old code into the latest .NET stack.