Episode 367
Mads is a Principal Product Manager on the Visual Studio team at Microsoft, where he champions developer productivity, performance, and extensibility. With a deep passion for streamlining the development experience, Mads has created dozens of widely used Visual Studio extensions — including Web Essentials, File Nesting, and Markdown Editor v2 — and maintains the Extensibility Essentials toolkit to empower other developers to build better tools. Mads brings over a decade of experience in web development on the Microsoft platform. He is also the founder of SchemaStore.org and a home automation enthusiast. Known for his engaging presentations and hands-on insights, Mads is a frequent speaker at developer conferences worldwide. He lives in the Pacific Northwest and his mission is simple: to make Visual Studio the most delightful development environment on the planet.
Topics of Discussion:
[2:38] More about Mads’ career journey at Microsoft.
[5:14] The new and improved Visual Studio.
[7:44] Backwards compatibility is a key feature — .NET solutions will still work across different Visual Studio versions.
[8:55] How Microsoft’s strategy differentiates between Visual Studio and VS Code.
[10:42] Visual Studio is the premier development environment for .NET and C# on Windows, offering the most comprehensive and optimized experience. While VS Code can handle .NET development, it’s not as feature-rich or performant as the full Visual Studio.
[12:58] Visual Studio has moved to a monthly release cadence to be more competitive with VS Code’s frequent updates.
[13:48] Deep AI integration in Visual Studio allows for context-aware assistance, including a new profiler agent that can help optimize code performance.
[23:53] Compilation performance is improved in Visual Studio 2026.
[26:35] The new profiler agent can be invoked through Copilot chat, running benchmarks and suggesting performance improvements scientifically.
[30:30] Developers can create custom MCP servers to integrate private systems and databases with AI tools using a project template.
[35:39] The AI coding agent in Visual Studio can work autonomously or with developer supervision, creating pull requests or working alongside the developer.
[39:11] Visual Studio’s Copilot can be used as a companion to bounce ideas off, helping with architectural decisions and new feature explorations.
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Published on 12 hours ago
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