Updated: July 10, 2020 (May 26, 2003)

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Executive Summary

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261 wordsTime to read: 3 min

Contributing Analyst: Michael Cherry

[This report is an updated version of the Feb. 2002 Research Report “The .NET Development Platform.” It reflects several changes in Microsoft’s development and operating systems platforms, including Windows Server 2003 and IIS 6.0.]

The .NET development platform, released in early 2002 and updated with the shipment of Windows Server 2003 and Visual Studio .NET 2003, marks the first major change in Microsoft’s development platform in nearly ten years. The development platform consists of a new software infrastructure (the .NET Framework and ASP.NET) for loading and running applications, programming languages to support that infrastructure (for example, C#), and a major set of enhancements to Microsoft’s developer tools (Visual Studio .NET).

Microsoft hopes that, with the release of the .NET Framework version 1.1, critics and IT planners alike will no longer consider the platform a “version 1 product.” The company hopes instead that developers will find it ready for the most demanding, mission-critical applications, and find it to be an easy way to build Web applications (particularly Web services) on Windows. This realization might turn more developers into advocates for the company’s OS and server products and draw them away from the competing Java platform.

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