.NET
There are 4 entries for the tag .NET
Developers rejoice! Today The Mono Project has released Mono 2.0 out into the wild which will enable you to build that dream application cross platform with the latest and greatest features in Microsoft's .NET runtime library. Sponsored by Novell, the Mono open source project has an active and enthusiastic contributing community and is positioned to become the leading choice for development of Linux applications says the projects website. The latest grand release of Mono v2.0 includes the following new Microsoft compatible features: ADO.NET 2.0 API for access to databases. ASP.NET 2.0 API for developing web-based applications. Windows.Forms 2.0...
posted @ Monday, October 06, 2008 11:32 AM | >
It's been a while since the last version of the SDK has been released and it looks like it's that time again. So, whip out your zip program, and head on over to the iControl downloads page and be the first one on your block to get your hands on the latest and greatest iControl SDK. Version 9.6.0 is a roll up of all previous upgrades and supports all previous versions of BIG-IP. What goodies can you expect to find in the SDK? Well, for starters, ASM and WA have made their debuts. LTConfig is the place to...
posted @ Monday, February 18, 2008 2:52 PM | >
I was trolling through my feeds this morning and saw the post "Developers Will Find C++ Applications Playing Surprisingly Strategic Role in 2008 with Multi-Core and SOA" Oh Realy? Not if Microsoft, Sun, IBM, BEA, Apache, or any other mainstream development platform vendor/org has anything to say about it. We'll start with this: While developers often think of developing new applications on Microsoft's .NET or a variety of Java platforms, C++ remains one of the most widely deployed development languages for mission critical applications. Define "Mission Critical" here. If they mean, legacy systems then I wouldn't disagree. ...
posted @ Wednesday, January 09, 2008 7:38 AM | >
In the last few months, I've been focused on Microsoft Technologies such as PowerShell, Windows Mobile, MOM, and most recently the iControl Assembly written in C# with Microsoft VisualStudio.
I've never been a professional Java developer so I never really got into extending the network in the java arena. Sure, I wrote a bunch of java samples to include with the iControl SDK, but those were nothing more than a bunch of command line scripts. Luckily for all of you, we now have Don on our team and he has started on some pretty cool Java related projects.
So, I got to thinking......
posted @ Tuesday, May 22, 2007 4:26 PM | >