(Redirected from Microsoft Imagine)
Developer(s) | Microsoft |
---|---|
Platform | Azure |
Website | Official website |
Microsoft Azure Dev Tools for Teaching or simply Azure Dev Tools for Teaching is a Microsoft program to provide students with software design and development tools at free of cost. The program is available for university/college and K-12 students in more than 120 countries.[1]
It has formerly been known as Microsoft Imagine, DreamSpark and MSDN-AA.
- 1History
- 3Products offered
History[edit]
Microsoft Azure Dev Tools For Teaching
To register, students must visit the Microsoft Imagine website and verify their identity through their verified educational institutions. If an institution is not listed on the available list, the user may manually verify their student status by uploading a proof such as an ID card.[citation needed]
The Microsoft Imagine program was announced by Bill Gates as DreamSpark on February 20, 2008 during a speech at Stanford University.[1][2] It is estimated that up to 35 million students will be able to access these software titles free of charge through this program.[3] The service was renamed to Microsoft Imagine on September 7, 2016, to better align with the annual Imagine Cup competition hosted by Microsoft.[4]
Repacked as Azure Dev Tools for Teaching[edit]
The Microsoft Imagine offering Azure Dev Tools for Teaching on 13 February 2019[citation needed] with hosting provided on the Microsoft Azure cloud and incorporating Microsoft Learn.[5]
Verification[edit]
Proof of student status is required to download software and obtain product keys. On the Imagine website, students can verify their identity using ISIC cards, access codes ordered by school administrators, or .edu email addresses. Students remain verified for 12 months afterwards. If students can't find their school, they can manually submit a response with a proof of student status.
Products offered[edit]
Several development software titles are available for download through the program.[6] They include:
Products available through Imagine Standard & Premium[edit]
- Visual Studio Community
- Visual Studio Professional
Products available only through Imagine Premium[edit]
- Microsoft BizTalk Server
- Microsoft Project
- Microsoft SharePoint Server
- Microsoft Visio
- Visual Studio Enterprise
- Windows Client
There are three Microsoft Office applications (Excel, PowerPoint, Word) not available through Imagine. However, Office Home & Student 2013 or Office 365 University offers those at a discounted price for students. Unlike the programs listed above, there is no way to access similar older and compatible versions (2010, 2007) of Office for Word, Excel or PowerPoint under Imagine. Also, the only desktop operating system now available for download is Windows 10 Education.[citation needed]
Additional Benefits[edit]
- Electronic License Management Systems (ELMS)
- Technical Support Incidents are the equivalent of paid Professional support
- Priority Support in Visual Studio Forums
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Microsoft Gives Software to Nurture Future Coders'. PCWorld. 19 February 2008.
- ^'Microsoft Gives Students Access to Technical Software at No Charge to Inspire Success and Make a Difference'. Stories. 18 February 2008.
- ^Microsoft DreamSpark Ignites Interest | WebProNewsArchived 2008-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Tarui, Hideto. 'マイクロソフト、学生支援プログラム'DreamSpark'を'Microsoft Imagine'へ改名'. Windows Forest. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
- ^'Microsoft Imagine is now Azure Dev Tools for Teaching'.
- ^'Sign in to your account'. login.microsoftonline.com.
External links[edit]
- Official website
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Microsoft_Azure_Dev_Tools_for_Teaching&oldid=902370025'
-->The Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML) DevTools are built with TypeScript, powered by open source, optimized for modern front-end workflows, and now available as a standalone Windows 10 app in the Microsoft Store!
For more on the latest features, check out DevTools in the latest update of Windows 10 (EdgeHTML 18).
Core tools
The Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML) DevTools include:
- An Elements panel to edit HTML and CSS, inspect accessibility properties, view event listeners, and set DOM mutation breakpoints
- A Console to view and filter log messages, inspect JavaScript objects and DOM nodes, and run JavaScript in the context of the selected window or frame
- A Debugger to step through code, set watches and breakpoints, live edit your code, and inspect your web storage and cookie caches
- A Network panel to monitor and inspect requests and responses from the network and browser cache
- A Performance panel to profile the time and system resources required by your site
- A Memory panel to measure your use of memory resources and compare heap snapshots at different states of code execution
- A Storage panel for inspecting and managing your web storage, IndexedDB, cookies and cache data
- A Service Workers panel for managing and debugging your service workers
- An Emulation panel to test your site with different browser profiles, screen resolutions, and GPS location coordinates
Please keep sending your feedback and feature requests!
Tip
Test on Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML) free from any browser:We partnered with BrowserStack to provide free live and automated testing on Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML).
Microsoft Store app
The Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML) DevTools are now available as a standalone Windows 10 app from the Microsoft Store, in addition to the in-browser (
F12
) tooling experience. With the store version comes a chooser panel for attaching to open local and remote page targets and a tabbed layout for easy switching between DevTools instances.Local debugging
To debug a page locally, simply launch the Microsoft Edge DevTools app. The Local panel of the chooser will display all of the active EdgeHTML content processes, including open Edge browser tabs, running PWAs (WWAHost.exe processes), and webview controls. Click on your desired target to attach and open a new tab instance of the DevTools.
Remote debugging
The Microsoft Edge DevTools app introduces basic support for debugging pages on a remote machine via our newly released DevTools Protocol. With the latest release comes remote access to core functionality in the Debugger, Elements (for read-only operations), and Console panels. Remote debugging is limited to Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML) running desktop hosts, with support for other EdgeHTML hosts and Windows 10 devices coming in future releases.
To get started, check out the Microsoft Edge DevTools section of the DevTools Protocol docs.
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Feedback
Please send us your feedback so we can continue improving the Microsoft Edge (EdgeHTML) DevTools for you! Simply open the tools (
F12
) and click the Send feedback button.You can also add and upvote tooling requests to our UserVoice forum and become a Windows Insider to preview the latest features coming to the DevTools. Use the Windows Feedback Hub app to post, upvote, track and get support for general Windows suggestions and problems.
General Shortcuts
These shortcuts control the main DevTools window and/or work across all tools.
General Shortcuts
These shortcuts control the main DevTools window and/or work across all tools.
Action | Shortcut |
---|---|
Show/Hide DevTools (opens to last viewed panel) | F12 , Ctrl + Shift + I |
Toggle docking (Undock/Bottom/Right) | Ctrl + Shift + D |
Open file | Ctrl + P , Ctrl + O |
Show non-editable HTML source code in Debugger | Ctrl + U |
Show/hide Console at the bottom of any other tool | Ctrl + ` |
Switch to Elements (DOM Explorer) | Ctrl + 1 |
Switch to Console | Ctrl + 2 |
Switch to Debugger | Ctrl + 3 |
Switch to Network | Ctrl + 4 |
Switch to Performance | Ctrl + 5 |
Switch to Memory | Ctrl + 6 |
Switch to Emulation | Ctrl + 7 |
Help Document | F1 |
Next tool | Ctrl + F6 |
Previous tool | Ctrl + Shift + F6 |
Previous tool (from history) | Ctrl + Shift + [ |
Next tool (from history) | Ctrl + Shift + ] |
Next Subframe | F6 |
Previous Subframe | Shift + F6 |
Next match in Search box | F3 |
Previous match in Search box | Shift + F3 |
Find in search box | Ctrl + F |
Give focus to console at the bottom | Alt + Shift + I |
Launch DevTools to Console | Ctrl + Shift + J |
Refresh the page. Note: if you're debugging and paused at a breakpoint, this resumes execution first. | Ctrl + Shift + F5 , Ctrl + R |
Microsoft Azure Dev tools for teaching offers a unified learning tools for skilling students in the cloud, it provides students with a vast set of resources.
Azure for Education offers comprehensive developer tools and training ranging from beginner to professional to support students and educators becoming skilled in Azure technologies, in addition to providing resources to get students career-ready such as LinkedIn University, Azure certification training through Microsoft Learn, and training in trending technologies such as AI and Data Science.
Microsoft Dev Tools Teaching Free
The Azure for Education portfolio focuses on three core offers:
- Azure for Students Starter - Provides students 13+ with free cloud and resources to get started building a web page or web app – ideal for K12 students.
- Azure for Students - Provides students 18+ with free cloud access and resources to build in-demand skills – ideal for university/college students.
- Azure Dev Tools for Teaching - Institutional access to enterprise grade developer tools and self-paced learning with path for students to add cloud access and resources.
Azure for Student now includes access to GPU resources, We suggest you choose the NC6 series based on the available credit allowance Azure for Student provides.
NC6 Virtual Machine
6 Cores
56.00 GiB RAM
1X K80 GPU
6 Cores
56.00 GiB RAM
1X K80 GPU
In the VM create flow, choose VM size NC6. If you don't see the opion of NC6? Check your filters.
If the option is greyed out? Try a different region, West US 2 has a large capacity of GPUs
Developer(s) | Microsoft |
---|---|
Platform | Azure |
Website | Official website |
Microsoft Azure Dev Tools for Teaching or simply Azure Dev Tools for Teaching is a Microsoft program to provide students with software design and development tools at free of cost. The program is available for university/college and K-12 students in more than 120 countries.[1]
It has formerly been known as Microsoft Imagine, DreamSpark and MSDN-AA.
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- 1History
- 3Products offered
History[edit]
To register, students must visit the Microsoft Imagine website and verify their identity through their verified educational institutions. If an institution is not listed on the available list, the user may manually verify their student status by uploading a proof such as an ID card.[citation needed]
The Microsoft Imagine program was announced by Bill Gates as DreamSpark on February 20, 2008 during a speech at Stanford University.[1][2] It is estimated that up to 35 million students will be able to access these software titles free of charge through this program.[3] The service was renamed to Microsoft Imagine on September 7, 2016, to better align with the annual Imagine Cup competition hosted by Microsoft.[4]
Repacked as Azure Dev Tools for Teaching[edit]
The Microsoft Imagine offering Azure Dev Tools for Teaching on 13 February 2019[citation needed] with hosting provided on the Microsoft Azure cloud and incorporating Microsoft Learn.[5]
Verification[edit]
Proof of student status is required to download software and obtain product keys. On the Imagine website, students can verify their identity using ISIC cards, access codes ordered by school administrators, or .edu email addresses. Students remain verified for 12 months afterwards. If students can't find their school, they can manually submit a response with a proof of student status.
Products offered[edit]
Several development software titles are available for download through the program.[6] They include:
Products available through Imagine Standard & Premium[edit]
- Visual Studio Community
- Visual Studio Professional
Products available only through Imagine Premium[edit]
- Microsoft BizTalk Server
- Microsoft Project
- Microsoft SharePoint Server
- Microsoft Visio
- Visual Studio Enterprise
- Windows Client
There are three Microsoft Office applications (Excel, PowerPoint, Word) not available through Imagine. However, Office Home & Student 2013 or Office 365 University offers those at a discounted price for students. Unlike the programs listed above, there is no way to access similar older and compatible versions (2010, 2007) of Office for Word, Excel or PowerPoint under Imagine. Also, the only desktop operating system now available for download is Windows 10 Education.[citation needed]
Additional Benefits[edit]
- Electronic License Management Systems (ELMS)
- Technical Support Incidents are the equivalent of paid Professional support
- Priority Support in Visual Studio Forums
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Microsoft Gives Software to Nurture Future Coders'. PCWorld. 19 February 2008.
- ^'Microsoft Gives Students Access to Technical Software at No Charge to Inspire Success and Make a Difference'. Stories. 18 February 2008.
- ^Microsoft DreamSpark Ignites Interest | WebProNewsArchived 2008-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Tarui, Hideto. 'マイクロソフト、学生支援プログラム'DreamSpark'を'Microsoft Imagine'へ改名'. Windows Forest. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
- ^'Microsoft Imagine is now Azure Dev Tools for Teaching'.
- ^'Sign in to your account'. login.microsoftonline.com.
External links[edit]
- Official website
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Microsoft_Azure_Dev_Tools_for_Teaching&oldid=902370025'