Microsoft is generating on the market a initial, publicly out there check develop of a developer toolset that makes it possible for programmers to write Internet applications using existing .Net-based equipment and languages.The toolset — code-named “Volta” (and previously code-named “Tesla”) — is the brainchild of Erik Meijer,
Microsoft Office Pro Plus 2007 Product Key, a SQL Server architect whose new title is principal architect of Volta. Meijer has been talking up for the past couple of years the concept of “democratizing the cloud” via the programing of multi-tier, distributed programs.On December 5, Microsoft made a Community Technology Preview (CTP) of the Volta toolset accessible for download. In order to use the toolset, developers need Visual Studio 2008,
Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2007 Serial, which Microsoft released to manufacturing in late November.How Microsoft ultimately will distribute and package Volta is still up in the air,
Office Pro Plus 2007 Activation Key, according to Meijer and Alex Daley, Group Product Manager of Microsoft Live Labs. (Live Labs is now the official “home” for Volta.) Meijer and Daley also declined to say which divisions inside Microsoft have been test-driving Volta, other than the Live Labs team.“LINQ (Language Integrated Query) and Volta are the two pillars for democratizing the cloud,” Meijer said. “It;s taken ten years for me to solve this problem. It will take another decade for this to be where it needs to be.”Volta makes it possible for developers to prototype and refine their client-server applications, including Ajax-style Web apps. It is especially suited for applications where developers can;t or shouldn;t partition functionality up-front between client and server.Just as Visual Basic made client-based application development readily available to a wider tier of developers,
Microsoft Office 2007 Standard Keygen, Volta is designed to make Internet programming simpler, according to Microsoft officials. Volta isn;t meant to be an alternative to the Ajax programming model,
Office Pro 2007, the Softies said.“We are not against JavaScript,” said Daley. “We are in favor of MSIL (Microsoft Intermediate Language. For us, JavaScript is just an assembly language. You can use Visual Basic or C# or whatever and all will compile to MSIL.”Meijer added: “We are wholeheartedly embracing the JavaScript run-time and adding the rich programming model of .Net to it. We want to make .Net out there everywhere.”Anyone on the market interested in giving Volta a whirl? What kinds of projects/apps could you envision utilizing Volta to create?