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I am a co-founder of Notches, an early stage startup currently based in NYC. We are building a free, open reviews network that anyone can participate in and anyone can build on top of. You can find out more on our official blog.

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All Tags » Programming » C# » Software Development » Microsoft (RSS)
  • Microsoft Silverlight

    A lot of people are very excited about Silverlight , the technology that was formerly known as WPF/E. Jesse says it will give Flash a real run for its money because of a better video story (emphasis in original). Unlike Flash, Silverlight (the new name) will support DRM, it supports the industry standard VC-1 codec used in HD-DVD and Blueray, and it can take advantage of the built-in media streaming capabilities of IIS. As for DRM support, I don't think that's of any real consequence. Jesse claims "companies that want to stream TV and movies over the web, will not consider any method that doesn't allow for DRM protection", but we're already seeing a trend away from DRM. That said, there are certainly things to get excited about, particularly the prospect of cross-platform CLR support and the ability to develop Flash-like applications with the power of the Visual Studio environment (and not having to learn a new scripting language at that). One thing worth noting is the fact that Flash is...
  • SubSonic

    We've been using SubSonic lately, which I first bookmarked from Scott's post . Essentially, the project is an implementation of the ActiveRecords pattern from Ruby on Rails in .NET. Or as the authors describe it, , "a toolset that helps a website build itself". I'm using it on a project I'm working on now and so far it's been very useful - though we haven't had to scale yet. We had to slightly adjust our data model to be more SubSonic-friendly, but it's pretty flexibile and even supports stored procedures if you're into that sort of thing (we are). It also "singularizes" the database tables - i.e., a Companies table becomes a Company object, and a Books table becomes a Book object. (Though it does strip the last 's' from Business.... I'm reminded of that old 1-800-MATT-RES commercial). Regardless of future experiences, I can wholeheartedly recommend it to build a DAL for prototyping.