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Microsoft ships Silverlight 2.0

Microsoft ships Silverlight 2.0

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 14 Oct 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The RIA developer tool includes adaptive video streaming capability and support for networks such as DoubleClick. IDC’s Kevin Restivo sizes up Adobe

Yesterday’s release of version 2.0 of Silverlight , a cross-browser runtime for creating Rich Internet Applications (RIAs), from Microsoft Corp. has new features designed to enhance usability for the developer and designer, which will ultimately lead to a better end user experience, a company executive said.

Among the new features, the most obvious to the developer is expanded support for the .NET Framework which allows developers to build RIA applications in a wide array of languages including Visual Basic, C#, JavaScript, IronPython and IronRuby, said Microsoft Canada Co. product manager Daniel Shapiro. It’s basically “.NET under the covers”, said Shapiro, so that developers can reuse their code and visual and media assets across different devices and platforms.

“That’s really a big deal,” he said, “considering our philosophy around building applications and building infrastructure has always been the flexibility of languages.”

To enhance the video watching experience, v2.0 includes progressive and adaptive streaming features. The former is useful, said Shapiro because it means end users won’t have to download an entire video in order to watch it as some sites might require, instead “it’s just sending it to you as you need [in order] to save huge amounts of bandwidth.” The latter, adaptive streaming, is meant to ease the pain of watching videos over a weak or finicky bandwidth by “packaging up mini bits of the video into different bit rates and delivering the video in the appropriate bit rate for your bandwidth and adjusting itself accordingly.”

Progressive and adaptive streaming features will be especially useful in the near future as RIA continues its move into the realm of mobile devices, said Shapiro.

The ability for developers to monetize the RIA applications they build is another focus with v2.0. Support has been built in so that developers can plug in to known advertising networks like DoubleClick, and is also extensible to plug in to their own ad engines.

Toronto-based Internet consulting firm iMason Inc. used Silverlight to build a traffic monitoring application for The Weather Network called TrafficEye that indicates traffic congestion in the Greater Toronto Area and provides live video of different legs of highways. The TrafficEye project, live since July, is basically a desktop frame that hosts the Silverlight application, said Jim Schwartz, iMason internet architect. “So you have a desktop application that looks like a desktop application, it feels like a desktop application,” he said, “but behind the code, it’s a Silverlight application.”


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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