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By Greg DeMichillie [bio]
Posted: Dec. 17, 2007
Purchase a copy of this report
The following an excerpt of a Research Report published by Directions on Microsoft, an
independent research firm focused exclusively on Microsoft strategy & technology. More samples of our content, as well as a list of upcoming articles and
reports are also available.
- Free! Executive Summary
- The latest versions of the .NET Framework and Visual Studio simplify coding of data queries; add support for new features introduced in Vista, Office 2007, and .NET Framework 3.0; and further improve Visual Studio as a Web development tool
- Free! Introduction
- The myriad of improvements in Visual Studio 2008 and the accompanying release of the .NET Framework 3.5 should have a measurable impact on programmer productivity
- LINQ Leads .NET Framework 3.5
- Language Integrated Query makes querying data such as relational databases substantially easier; updates to the Windows Communication Foundation make it easier to build Web services based on the REST architecture
- Improving Productivity and Catching Up with .NET
- With Visual Studio 2008, Microsoft's developer tools are catching up to the version of the .NET Framework that shipped with Windows Vista in Dec. 2006
- Tools for Office Updated
- Visual Studio 2008 clarifies the roadmap for Office-based development and brings the toolset up-to-date with Office 2007
- Web Development in Visual Studio 2008
- Better support for Cascading Style Sheets, along with better JavaScript support, highlights new Web development features in Visual Studio 2008
- Future Directions
- Visual Studio 2008 is the latest stop on the developer tool roadmap, but important updates are coming in 2008 and beyond
- Resources
- Links and pointers to additional information about Visual Studio 2008 and the .NET Framework 3.5
- Appendix: Visual Studio 2008 Pricing
- Chart summarizes volume prizing for Visual Studio 2008
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