Silverlight aims to compete with Adobe Flash and the presentation components of Ajax. It also competes with Sun Microsystems’ JavaFX, which was launched a few days after Silverlight.
Tags: .Net, Accelerator board, ad-insertion solutions, Adobe, Adobe Integrated Runtime, AIR, AJAX, animation, application hosting solution, author content, back-end Web environment, browser-based, C#, designers, developers, Emmy Award, Escient VC-1 Player, Expression Studio, Flash, Flex, interactive applications, Internet Applications, Internet Information Services, JavaFX, JavaScript, JSON, Linux, Mac OS X, media content, media experiences, media format, media rich experiences, media tools, Microsoft, Microsoft Silverlight, Microsoft Windows, moonlight, MP3, operating system, PHP, proprietory, Python, RIA, Rich Internet Applications, Role-specific tools, Ruby, Silverlight, Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers, software features, software services, Sun Microsystems, vector graphics, video playback, Visual Basic, Visual Studio, web application, Web Consortium, Web designers, Web experiences, Web Standards, Web technologies, Windows Media technologies, windows presentation foundation, with your existing infrastructure, WPF, XAML, XHTML, XML, XSLT
Microsoft is finally making real efforts to woo the designer community who have traditionally worshipped the Adobe and Mac product ranges. One new product that addresses this previously overlooked community is Silverlight, which uses the XAML technology and is touted as Microsoft’s Flash killer. For anyone who is keen to listen, Microsoft proposes that Silverlight will achieve similar results to Flash, but it does so in an entirely different way and has different aims. So, the big question is, will Microsoft be able to break the dominance of Adobe’s Flash platform, that is available on the PC, Mac and mobile devices alike? I’m sure the jury is out on that one, but it can be said it is an uphill task.
Tags: 3.0 technologies, ActiveX control, Adobe, animation, brilliant tool, browser-based, designer, e.g, extensible application markup language, favourite editor, Flash, Flash platform, Flex, HTML, interactivity, Internet Applications, Internet arena, Linux, Mac, Mac OS X, Magic Extensible Markup Language, Microsoft, Microsoft Windows, mobile web browser, moonlight, MXML, operating systems, OSX, RIA, rich internet applciations, Rich Internet Applications, Rich Internet arena, Silverlight, stream media, thermo, user interfaces, vector graphics, video, Web 2.0, web application development mix, web developers, web world, windows presentation foundation, Windows Workflow Foundation, XAML, XAML technology, XML
With the buzz around Rich Internet Applications (RIA) gaining a serious amount of steam and indeed press, with the likes of Adobe’s Flash/Flex and Microsoft’s Silverlight, Sun have now got in on the act with JavaFX. Announced at this years JavaOne conference, JavaFX makes use of a new scripting language and the Swing API for user interface (UI) design to position itself firmly in the RIA camp.
Tags: Adobe Integrated Runtime, AIR, Flash, Flex, JavaFX, Rich Internet Applications, Silverlight, XAML
Rich Internet Applications are just the beginning. A key trend taking place throughout the Web industry is the urgency to integrate disparate systems and software tools to reduce costs, increase developer productivity, reduce the need for manual processing and intervention in transactions, and decrease time to market. To achieve these objectives, organisations have endorsed the adoption of standards-based systems combined with the migration to Web Services and Service Orientated Architecture. This has led to a requirement to create a consistent and intuitive interface to applications, data and services. The immediate goal of these efforts is to provide simpler, quicker and more efficient access and processing of information.
Tags: Adobe, AIR, Apple, data, disparate systems, Flash, Flex, future, gears, Google, HTML, integrated applications, Internet Applications, Internet Applications Rich Internet Applications, JavaFX, LinkedIn, manual processing, Microsoft, Microsoft Windows, performance solutions, quicktime, RIA, Rich Internet Applications, SaaS, Service Orientated Architecture, services, Silverlight, soa, Software as a Service, software orientated architecture, software tools, sun, Web 2.0, web applications, Web industry, web services, Web Standards, XAML, XML
The day of the emasculated Web 1.0 where the client-side was functionally poor, where the user interface was akin to the days of the mainframe computer, is rapidly diminishing and the new era of the Web 2.0 has yielded a new way of thinking. The demand for web applications, particularly in the business arena, is increasing at an exponential rate as the benefits of new technologies and paradigms are comprehended by the CTOs, CIOs and decision makers. Web interfaces have significantly restricted the interactive user experiences possible on the Web, and the ability of those Web applications to present increasingly complex information to the user, to date.
Tags: flas, Flex, Information Architecture, Rich Internet Applications, user experience, User Interface Design, web 1.0, Web 2.0, XAML