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Getting Started with Silverlight
For people who are not aware what Silverlight is, Silverlight is Microsoft's cross-browser, cross-platform, and cross-device plug-in for delivering the next generation of .NET based media experiences and rich interactive applications for the Web.
Silverlight was designed to address these properties:
- Lightweight browser plug-in—Silverlight has Windows and Macintosh modules that are designed to enhance Internet Explorer (versions 6.0 and 7.0), Firefox 2.0, and Safari browsers.
- Native presentation runtime— Software-based browser enhancement that allows rendering of XAML-based interactive 2-D graphics, text, and media, in addition to the browser native rendering of HTML. XAML can be used inline, in a file, or in a package.
- Interactive video and audio—Cross-platform independent media runtime that can render Windows Media content (WMV and WMA) in addition to MP3. Video and audio are handled as a media element in XAML, enabling flexibility in their presentation. Furthermore, the media support leverages the huge infrastructure and ecosystem around Windows Media, enabling cost-effective delivery of top-quality media.
- Programming layer—In consistency with the Web architecture, Silverlight XAML is exposed using a DOM model to JavaScript. That way, AJAX programs can utilize the extended markup rendering capability using the same programming paradigms and practices (on the client and on the server).
Topics: ASP.NET, Silverlight
Microsoft Eats Its Young: AjaxPro is no more

Back when .NET didn't have an Ajax pot to piss in, I voraciously read Michael Schwarz's blog and followed his Ajax.NET framework. He eventually released a companion "Pro" version. Now, several Microsoft MVP awards later, he is packing it in. I, for one, will miss the competition in the .NET world. That leaves two major alternatives that I'm aware of:
Since the concepts around how Ajax apps should be built are still in flux, it would be nice to have a few alternatives in the .NET world (especially ones that don't produce the XHR salad that ASP.NET Ajax does).
Technorati Tags: ajax, .net, ajaxpro.net, gaia widgets, anthem.net
Topics: .NET, Ajax Frameworks, ASP.NET, C#, Microsoft
About Pathfinder
Recent
- Bandwidth profiling Flex projects and more with Charles
- iPhone SDK: UIViewController Testing & TDD
- Icons are evil; so are menus - unless you do them right
- The Truth About Designing For Security
- GWT, Gadgets and OpenSocial, Part 2
- Has Many has_many: A Refactoring Story
- The Hidden Power of Canvas
- Review of fixture_replacement2 plugin
- Chess Game Viewer in GWT
- From JSP to Ruby on Rails: First thoughts on front-end coding conventions
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