Desmond File

Blog archive

MIXing Bowl

Microsoft's MIX07, the touted 72-hour conversation with Web developers and designers, is drawing to a close as you receive this. The Las Vegas-hosted conference was first launched last year, but quickly rose close to the top of the Microsoft road tour stack, thanks in part to Redmond's frantic Web development tools efforts. From ASP.NET AJAX to Expression Studio to Silverlight, Microsoft has been working in overdrive the past year-and-a-half.

The MIX07 event certainly reflected that. While an awful lot of news has trickled out over the past six months, Ray Ozzie and crew were able to hit a few long balls. Among them: news that the next version of Silverlight (formerly code-named "WPF/E") will support the Common Language Runtime (CLR) of .NET, as well as dynamic languages like Ruby.

What's clear is that Silverlight is not simply a media play. Instead, Microsoft is aiming to take its managed code environment to the broader Internet. With Silverlight as a target, .NET developers can use the same skills (and much of the same code) that they employ to build Windows applications to build rich Internet applications.

Also announced was the Microsoft Silverlight Streaming service, a free online hosting service that will allow developers to serve their Silverlight content off Microsoft servers at no charge. Obviously, the service is an effort to nudge Silverlight out of its cage and get it into the wild.

Executive Web Editor Michael Domingo was at the show and managed to track down several key Microsoft representatives. You can find out more about his reporting and that of our news editor Chris Kanaracus in the special MIX07 coverage, in the May 15 issue of Redmond Developer News magazine.

What are your impressions of Microsoft's MIX07 activities? Has Redmond hit critical mass with its Silverlight effort? Write me at [email protected].

Posted by Michael Desmond on 05/02/2007


comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Copilot Engineering in the Cloud with Azure and GitHub

    Who better to lead a full-day deep dive into this tech than two experts from GitHub, which introduced the original "AI pair programmer" and spawned the ubiquitous Copilot moniker?

  • Uno Platform Wants Microsoft to Improve .NET WebAssembly in Two Ways

    Uno Platform, a third-party dev tooling specialist that caters to .NET developers, published a report on the state of WebAssembly, addressing some shortcomings in the .NET implementation it would like to see Microsoft address.

  • Random Neighborhoods Regression Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the random neighborhoods regression technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. Compared to other ML regression techniques, advantages are that it can handle both large and small datasets, and the results are highly interpretable.

  • As Some Orgs Restrict DeepSeek AI Usage, Microsoft Offers Models and Dev Guidance

    While some organizations are restricting employee usage of the new open source DeepSeek AI from a Chinese company due to data collection concerns, Microsoft has taken a different approach.

  • Useful New-ish Features in .NET/C#

    We often hear about the big new features in .NET or C#, but what about all of those lesser known, but useful new features? How exactly do you use constructs like collection indices and ranges, date features, and pattern matching?

Subscribe on YouTube

Upcoming Training Events