| By Dennis Hayes | Article Rating: |
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| September 11, 2007 09:15 AM EDT | Reads: |
16,711 |
Microsoft has a new set of technologies called Silverlight that are meant to bring rich multimedia to browsers and portable devices. They have released two versions: a full release of version 1.0 and a beta version of 1.1. Version 1.0 is not very interesting, but the 1.1 beta is totally different and is making a big splash.
It is .NET based, and of course Mono is working furiously on it. In fact, after Miguel saw Silverlight for the first time at the Microsoft MIX 07 conference in Las Vegas and was offered the chance to demo Moonlight (the Mono version of Silverlight) at Microsoft Re-MIX 07 in Paris in 21 days, the whole Mono team started on a 21-day death march to implement Moonlight in time to demo it in Paris. After which, Miguel said
"The past 21 days have been some of the most intense hacking days that I have ever had and the same goes for my team that worked 12 to 16 hours per day every single day -including weekends - to implement Silverlight for Linux in record time."
I know the long hard days Miguel and the Mono team typically work, and when he starts talking about "the most intense hacking days" he has ever had, part of me wishes I had been part of it, and part of me is glad I wasn't.
What can a bunch of monkeys banging on a bunch of typewriters for 21 days create? The complete works of Shakespeare? Nope. Check out Figure 1.
Joshua Allen from Microsoft was impressed with the Mono hack-a-thon and blogged about it a bit at http://visitmix.com/ (see the June 21 entry). Note that Mono has not completed implementing the entire Silverlight suit, but the screenshots show how much progress was made in just 21 days.
For more screenshots, see www.mono-project.com/MoonlightShots. If you go to the bottom of the page and scroll up, you can see how Moonlight progressed. The Moonlight homepage is at http://www.mono-project.com/Moonlight, and the Silverlight homepages are at http://silverlight.net/ and www.microsoft.com/silverlight/. You can also see video of Moonlight animation and video capture on Miguel's blog at http://tirania.org/blog/index.html (see the June 24 entries). Moonlight is being developed as part of the Mono Olive Project (the Mono implementation of .NET 3.0). The implementation is now being discussed at http://groups.google.com/group/mono-olive.
There are a number of parts that combine to form Silverlight, including a new security model (see a good whitepaper at http://blogs.msdn.com/shawnfa/archive/2007/05/09/the-silverlight-security-model.aspx), video codecs, and a new version of the .NET libraries labeled .NET 2.1 (aka WPF/E). .NET 2.1 is both a subset (similar to, but different from, the compact framework), and a super set (adds libraries to support the new functionality); don't even get me started on how it relates to .NET 3.0 and 3.5.
C#3.0
Mono continues to work on C#3.0 and this month brings full support for the specification for implicitly typed local variables and implicitly typed arrays. I added "for the specification" because the specification does not support implicitly typed multidimensional arrays, but the Microsoft C# 3.0 compiler does support them; it is not clear if this is an enhancement or a bug; once this is decided, the Mono team will code accordingly.
Google Summer of Code
Students involved with the Google Summer of Code, including those working on Mono, are making lots of progress. Google is having a major impact not only on these students' lives, but also on the many projects they are working on. I would like to tell you all the cool things the students are doing just in the Mono project, but I don't even have time for the highlights this month. Go check them out at http://groups.google.com/group/mono-soc-2007 and http://planet-soc.com/.
MonoDevelop
MonoDevelop, the SharpDevelop fork for Mono, has released version 0.14. The MonoDevelop team has made a lot of progress on this release, and they now plan to make two more big releases in the next three months, and then do a feature freeze to prepare for the big version 1.0 release. This release includes a subversion add-in, refactoring, smart C# indenting, and importing/exporting Visual Studio 2005. The next releases are planned to include key binding, improved ASP.NET support, and, from the Summer of Code students, C/C++ support and improved make file integration. Full release notes are at www.monodevelop.com/Release_notes_for_MonoDevelop_0.14.
Facebook
Tyler has posted information on how to use Mono to create Facebook applications; see his Weather# application example at www.unethicalblogger.com/posts/tyler/mono_meet_facebook.
Odds and Ends
Also Marcos Cobena (a summer of code student) has described how to compile Olive (.NET 3.0) on Mono at www.youcannoteatbits.org/Blog/Archives/2007-April.html#Saturday%2c+April+21%2c+2007.
Banshee, the music player, now runs on Windows (screenshot at http://bp3.blogger.com/_vUUhoww_aGI/RnnZTn6WDSI/
AAAAAAAAAOc/G6lyyAmfS5Q/s1600-h/itsalive.jpg).
Mono has a list of what is needed to have complete .NET 2.0 compatibility at www.mono-project.com/Completing2.0Profile; currently the list is about 214 items long.
Autosize is coming to System.Windows.Forms. This is one of the biggest missing pieces left in Winforms; if you look through the Moma reports, it appears very often, because VisualStudio sets it for most controls (to true or false depending on the control).
Also mojoPortal 2.2.2.8 has been released, and Mono is again being built from the same source code, but with a switch that turns off WebParts; see more at www.mojoportal.com/download.aspx.
Brian Nickels shows how to make any application a Web server at http://kerrick.wordpress.com/2007/06/12/make-any-net-app-a-web-server/.
The last few columns have been so packed that I have neglected to mention that the March issue began my fifth year of writing "Monkey Business" for .NET Developer's Journal.
Published September 11, 2007 Reads 16,711
Copyright © 2007 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Dennis Hayes
Dennis Hayes is a programmer at Georgia Tech in Atlanta Georgia where he writes software for the Adult Cognition Lab in the Psychology Department. He has been involved with the Mono project for over six years, and has been writing the Monkey Business column for over five years.
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Silverlight News Desk 07/25/07 04:39:28 PM EDT | |||
Microsoft has a new set of technologies called Silverlight that are meant to bring rich multimedia to browsers and portable devices. They have released two versions: a full release of version 1.0 and a beta version of 1.1. Version 1.0 is not very interesting, but the 1.1 beta is totally different and is making a big splash. It is .NET based, and of course Mono is working furiously on it. In fact, after Miguel saw Silverlight for the first time at the Microsoft MIX 07 conference in Las Vegas and was offered the chance to demo Moonlight (the Mono version of Silverlight) at Microsoft Re-MIX 07 in Paris in 21 days, the whole Mono team started on a 21-day death march to implement Moonlight in time to demo it in Paris. After which, Miguel said 'The past 21 days have been some of the most intense hacking days that I have ever had and the same goes for my team that worked 12 to 16 hours per day every single day -including weekends - to implement Silverlight for Linux in record time.' |
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