Search
Thursday, November 20, 2008 ..:: Events ::.. Register  Login
 Speaker Events Minimize
Speaker Bio:

 

 

:
Abraham Saldana has been working as a consultant in Microsoft technology for over eight years. He has worked for different clients, including Fortune 100 companies within the United States and Mexico. Abraham started programming in a Dos world, moved to Visual Basic 5 and 6, and eventually to .Net using both, Visual Basic and C#. Currently, Abraham is a lead developer at True.com and his role includes helping architect this highly visible website using ASP.Net 2.0 and SQL 2005.

 

 

 

  • April 6th 2006 C# SIG  (1 hour) 34 in attendance

Abraham Saldana and Vince Blasberg - SQLServer 2005 Night - Using the new XML data type with XQuery, XML, XSLT, and SQLCLR development in C#.

 

  • June 8th 2006 DDNUG (2 Hour) 53 in attendance

SQL Server 2005 and XQuery.

Learn how to take advantage of the new XML Data Types in SQL Server 2005 to build robust applications.

 

  • June 24th 2006 Dallas Code Camp (1 Hour) 46 in attendance

XSLT Extensions using VS 2005 and C# - Abraham Saldaña

 

  • March 8th 2007 DDNUG (20 Mins) 145 in attendance

.Net 3.0 Community Launch

Take a look at the new technologies available with .Net 3.0. Presented by members of our .Net community: Shane Holder, Abe Saldana, Trent Nix and Dave O'Hara. A few months ago the Microsoft Vista, Office and .Net 3.0 Community Launch team enabled them for this presentation and now it is time for you to take advantage of that!

 

  • April 5th 2007 C# SIG (2 Hour) 30 in attendance

WCF and SOA Development

Learn how to take advantage of the new windows communication foundation to build robust applications.

 

  • April 21st 2007 Dallas Code Camp (1 Hour) 18 in attendance

WCF and SOA development (Level 300)

Learn how to take advantage of the new windows communication foundation to build robust applications.

  

Copyright 2005 CodersOasis.com and HotMediaStudios.net   Terms Of Use  Privacy Statement
Portal engine source code is copyright 2002-2008 by DotNetNuke. All Rights Reserved