Watch the First Module Of My StreamInsight Course … For Free

I recently authored and published a Pluralsight course on StreamInsight. As part of a marketing agreement between Microsoft and Pluralsight, the first module of this course is now available on Microsoft’s TechNet site. On the middle right of the page, you’ll see a promo section where you can launch this introductory module. No sign up, no email address required, nothing. Just click and watch.

If you’ve been curious about what StreamInsight is, or have an odd interest in hearing me speak, now’s the time to indulge yourself. If you like where the course is going, I’d strongly encourage you to sign up for a Pluralsight subscription, which is one of the best investments that a developer can make.

Author: Richard Seroter

Richard Seroter is Director of Developer Relations and Outbound Product Management at Google Cloud. He’s also an instructor at Pluralsight, a frequent public speaker, the author of multiple books on software design and development, and a former InfoQ.com editor plus former 12-time Microsoft MVP for cloud. As Director of Developer Relations and Outbound Product Management, Richard leads an organization of Google Cloud developer advocates, engineers, platform builders, and outbound product managers that help customers find success in their cloud journey. Richard maintains a regularly updated blog on topics of architecture and solution design and can be found on Twitter as @rseroter.

2 thoughts

  1. Richard , first of all congratulations for your StreamInsight course. I would like to mention that you describe in one of the lessons that there is 3 Types of Events : Point, Interval and Edge. I consider these more like Event Models or Event Shapes. Type of Events are more like primitive values, class or struct which define the Payload of that particular event.

    1. Donaciano, that’s very true and more accurate than how I phrased it. “Types of events” can be interpreted multiple ways (technical structure, as you have, or even business events vs. system events, etc), but thanks for pointing this out!

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