How WIF Wedges Itself in the WCF Pipeline

How WIF Wedges Itself in the WCF Pipeline

digg_url = “http://blogs.msdn.com/b/vbertocci/archive/2010/07/06/how-wif-wedges-itself-in-the-wcf-pipeline.aspx”;digg_title = “How WIF Wedges Itself in the WCF Pipeline”;digg_bgcolor = “#FFFFFF”;digg_skin = “normal”;digg_url = undefined;digg_title = undefined;digg_bgcolor = undefined;digg_skin = undefined; if it’s true that a picture is worth 10^3 words… Without the carrot/stick of the book I would have never spent the cycles to put together a visual representation…

Protecting Workflow Services with WIF

Protecting Workflow Services with WIF

digg_url = “http://blogs.msdn.com/b/vbertocci/archive/2010/07/06/protecting-workflow-services-with-wif.aspx”;digg_title = “Protecting Workflow Services with WIF”;digg_bgcolor = “#FFFFFF”;digg_skin = “normal”;digg_url = undefined;digg_title = undefined;digg_bgcolor = undefined;digg_skin = undefined; It’s since March 2007 that WCF and WF started their mind meld (remember Orcas?) and I am tempted to say that in the .NET Framework 4 the process is pretty much complete….