Author Topic: Microsoft confirms Silverlight 3 to launch on July 10  (Read 1643 times)

Offline phat vapor

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Microsoft confirms Silverlight 3 to launch on July 10
« on: May 31, 2009, 02:45:43 PM »
Microsoft is planning to launch Silverlight 3 and its Expression Studio 3 designer tools on July 10 company spokespeople confirmed today.

Silverlight 3 introduces more than 50 new features, including 3D support, GPU acceleration, H.264 video support and out-of-the-browser capabilities to Silverlight.. The out-of-browser support will enable developers to build applications that work like Adobe's AIR plugin. Dramatic video performance and quality improvements are also expected.

Microsoft is currently running a Silverlight 3 beta for developers and will be launching the final product on July 10th.

Silverlight 3 was not expected until later this year but yesterday company officials began sending out press invites for the launch.

Offline javajolt

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Re: Microsoft confirms Silverlight 3 to launch on July 10
« Reply #1 on: May 31, 2009, 03:46:03 PM »

Silverlight 3 arrives in beta form with a huge host of improvements. But what is really mind blowing is just how quickly Microsoft has been able to cram this many features into its Flash competitor.


As expected, Silverlight 3 was announced today at MIX09, this year's iteration of Microsoft's annual conference for web developers, designers, and enthusiasts. While the keynote that just finished was full of little announcements that were handed out faster than the audience could swallow them, the one that stood out the most was the third iteration of Microsoft's Flash alternative, Silverlight. Links for the first and last beta of Silverlight 3, and the many development tools surrounding it, went live earlier today.

During the keynote, Scott Guthrie, corporate vice president of the .NET Developer Platform at Microsoft, announced a list of improvements that left me wondering if "the third time's the charm." The new beta is 40KB smaller than Silverlight 2, which is not exactly mind-blowing—until you look at what's inside.

Guthrie threw some numbers at the audience: more than 200 Microsoft products and websites use Silverlight, 10,000 applications globally use it, and there are more than 350 million installs of the runtime to date.

"In the short time since we launched Silverlight and Expression Blend, Microsoft has rapidly introduced new features and functionality that enable customers to deliver outstanding Web sites," Guthrie said, and if you look at the above picture, you can see he wasn't kidding. Silverlight development is one of the fastest-developing projects at Microsoft, with Silverlight 1 being out for only a year before Silverlight 2 was released. Six months afterwards, we're on to the Silverlight 3 beta, and Guthrie says there are thousands of new APIs and hundreds of new features for this version. The really important ones can be broken down into four points:

•Media: GPU hardware acceleration, new codec support (H.264, AAC, MPEG-4), raw bitstream Audio/Video API, and improved logging for media analytics

•Graphics: GPU Acceleration and hardware compositing, perspective 3D, bitmap and pixel API, pixel shader effects, and Deep Zoom improvements

•Application development: Deep linking, navigation and SEO, improved text quality, multi-touch support, 60+ controls available, and library caching support

•Data: Data-binding improvements, validation error templates, server data push improvements, binary XML networking support, and multi-tier REST data support

From the above feature list (full changelog here > http://silverlight.net/getstarted/silverlight3/default.aspx#whatsnew), it's not really surprising that Microsoft was boasting about all the companies that are developing rich Internet applications (RIAs) using Silverlight. NBC, for example, is going to be using Silverlight again for their coverage of the next Olympics, which are being hosted in Vancouver next year. This time, though, they'll be streaming at 720p. Silverlight 1 was very much focused on streaming video, whereas version 2 was aimed at RIAs, but version 3 seems to expand on both areas.

In terms of streaming, Microsoft says Silverlight 3 brings "high-definition video in full-screen mode, with stutter-free live and on-demand video" to the table, and it was quite obvious from the demonstrations that it wasn't just talk. Guthrie showed off smooth streaming, which allowed him to start playing an HD video anywhere he chose, instantaneously.

In addition to all these improvements, version 3 now allows developers to create Web applications that can exist outside the browser, like Adobe AIR. How does it work? Open a browser page. Launch the Silverlight application. Close the browser. The Silverlight program lives on.

It's still limited by the security features provided by the browser, and it's still a Silverlight application in the sense that it works exactly the same way on multiple platforms, but it looks the same regardless of where you launch it. Companies can therefore update their applications anytime they want (Internet-connectivity detection and auto-update can be built-in), using one codebase across platforms.



Offline javajolt

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Re: Microsoft confirms Silverlight 3 to launch on July 10
« Reply #2 on: May 31, 2009, 03:56:49 PM »

Microsoft throws Silverlight 3 beta at Adobe Plugs gaps, and then some

Microsoft has opened a new front in its battle with Adobe Systems, releasing beta code for Silverlight 3 that plugs fundamental gaps in its media player and attempts to out flank Flash.

The company opened its annual Mix developer and designer conference by releasing the Silverlight 3 SDK and Visual Studio 2008 Service Pack 1 tools here. Microsoft claimed a 4.4Mb and eight second-download of the player, making it smaller than Silverlight 2.

The beta offers features specifically for developers and that are designed to help managers and consumers in media, line-of-business applications and online advertising.

Of course, it wouldn't be a battle with Adobe without the usual claims of stats and customer references to try and prove Microsoft is the platform you should be buying in to.

Corporate-wide president of the .NET development platform Scott Guthrie told Mix there had been 350 million installs of Silverlight since 2007, when it first appeared. He claimed more than 200 partners support Silverlight while customers now include eBay, BMW, Toyota, CBS's March Madness, and NBC's planned Winter Olympics coverage. NBC used Silverlight to stream its coverage of the Beijing Olympics last Summer

While the data may be subjective and the customer references ten-a-penny, it would be impossible to argue Microsoft is not committed to Silverlight. The Silverlght 3 beta comes just four months after Microsoft's released the current version of Silverlight, version 2.

Also, Microsoft's taken a small but important step to make it easier for developers to find and work with Silverlight in the first place.

Guthrie announced Internet Information Services (IIS) Media Services, a media stack for Microsoft's IIS web server that can be found and downloaded via the latest version of Windows Platform Installer get it here http://www.microsoft.com/web/downloads/platform.aspx, which was announced at Mix.

The installer is a no-brainer vehicle for people who find they don't have the necessary bits and then would usually need to surf around and try and find them. Windows Platform Installer will examine dependencies in the software you've asked for and pull in the bits needed to run the software - such as IIS or a database - via the browser.

It's one among many steps to make Silverlight 3 take on Adobe's Flash and AIR. To get there, though, Microsoft's had to first plug gaps in Silverlight 2.

Among the bread-and-butter work in Silverlight 3 are a new navigation and page framework that'll let you integrate Silverlight with a browser's forward and back button. There's also ClearType for Windows and Mac, more than 100 controls for charting and layouts, the ability to add pixel shading, and support for hardware acceleration and H.264, MP4, and ACC.

On the advanced front, Silverlight 3 will run outside the browser on Windows and Mac without the need for an additional download by the user to get up and running.

Silverlight 3 can also work offline, detect local networks, and download content to cache. Library caching has been added, so a Silverlight 3 application can detect the libraries it needs and download them when the application is played, so the developer doesn't' need to pack their application with every single library during the build phase on the off chance they'll be needed.

Support for multi-touch applications has been added and Microsoft's also upped Silverlight's search-engine optimization (SEO) capabilities. Features include the ability to let users copy and past Silverlight URLs to forward media content and for Silverlight URLs to show up in search engine queries.

Guthrie's said SCO features would help you build "truly differentiated media experiences and monetize them."