NET are synchronized -> in Mono they are not -> the same multithreading app, working on. Many of the corners in Mono are NOT complete (And i don't mean Windows-associated things). Not only in architecture but also in realization of C# for example. NET apps on Mono - Mono is absolutely not complete. Mono is nice, i respect Novell for developing such a project. I know that a lot of MAC people have a great abhorrence of anything Microsoft but comparing writing software under Visual Studio and then under the XCode environment is about like using a motorcycle to get to your destination over a bicycle. XCode is nice, but C# and managed code has a lot of advantages over C++. It would be nice to be able to develop under Visual Studio and then have your apps run on the MAC or even have Visual Studio on the MAC. Dot NET is constantly evolving and besides, who uses a mac for programming anyway? Almost all large businesses use PC's. Mono is a great idea, but it won't drive large numbers of mac users to. NET stack and not make me go to the other frameworks. Right now I am starting to learn new languages and platforms because I recently bought a Mac. I only hope that this is the future, as I do believe that. How amazing would it be to be able to write a application for Win and Mac users? This just leaves out Linux.which they might as well include.
These features, when enabled via a group policy registry key and an application certificate, mean users won’t need to leave the browser to perform complex tasks such as multiple window support, full trust support in browser including COM and file system access, in browser HTML hosting within Silverlight, and P/Invoke support for existing native code to be run directly from Silverlight.I can only hope that the full. In addition, Silverlight 5 extends the ‘Trusted Application’ model to the browser for the first time. New features in Silverlight 5 include Hardware Decode of H.264 media, which provides a significant performance improvement with decoding of unprotected content using the GPU Postscript Vector Printing to improve output quality and file size and an improved graphics stack with 3D support that uses the XNA API on the Windows platform to gain low-level access to the GPU for drawing vertex shaders and low-level 3D primitives. So what is new in Silverlight 5? The announcement over at the Silverlight blog highlights the following changes: Browsers that are open during installation need to be closed and reopened before they recognize the new plugin version automatically. Make sure Silverlight is set to enabled in Internet Explorer.
Use if you are repeatedly prompted to install Silverlight or if you are unable to install the out of browser version of TC2000 on a PC.
Users can download and install the new version of Silverlight. This article describes how to enable Microsoft Silverlight in Internet Explorer. Visit the Silverlight getting started page for information about the installed Silverlight installation on your system, the system requirement chart, instructions on how to uninstall Silverlight and download links pointing to the latest version of the application. Other browsers may also be compatible even though they are not listed. Opera is not listed on the compatibility page even though it is compatible with Silverlight.
The new version is available for download for all support platforms (all Windows operating systems from Windows XP SP3 and higher and Intel based Mac OS X 10.5.7 or higher) and web browsers (Internet Explorer 6 and higher, Firefox 3.6 and higher, Safari 4 and higher, Google Chrome 12 and higher).
It will be the same in release Not changed to HTML5 in 2018 Comparing, looks like SfB Server 2019 is a copy of 2015 version with removed features. Silverlight 5 now could be the last version of the technology that gets released. I installed SfB Server 2019 Preview in lab and see the same old Control panel on dead Silverlight. There have been rumors for quite some time now that Microsoft would stop Silverlight development as it was never really able to break Flash's dominance on the world wide web. It is in many regards Microsoft's answer to Adobe's Flash technology.
Microsoft has released a new version of Silverlight, a technology for creating interactive web and mobile applications.