Now that Adobe has launched the alpha construct of Apollo, it's time for Microsoft to show its hand, in terms of its plans to develop a development environment for coders interested in its WPF/E (Windows Presentation Foundation Everywhere) technology. Apollo is Adobe's cross-operating-system runtime that is designed to allow Flash, Flex,
Office Home And Business 2010 Key, HTML, JavaScript and AJAX developers to create and deploy rich Internet apps on the desktop. WPF/E is Microsoft's cross-platform subset of the Windows Presentation Foundation that is designed to allow .Net,
Office Professional 2010 Key, JavaScript and XAML (eXtensible Markup Language) developers to enable their rich apps to run across the Web. Are they head-to-head competitors? My ZDNet blogging colleague Ryan Stewart says not exactly. But they are close. As part of its Apollo release, Adobe made available early versions of a handful of related tools,
Office 2010 Pro Plus Key, includnig the Apollo software development kit, extensions for Adobe Flex Builder ane some sample applications. Microsoft made the first Community Technology Preview (CTP) release of WPF/E available in December 2006. In February,
Office Pro Plus 2007, Microsoft launched an updated WPF/E CTP that added support for the Apple Safari browser. But where are the dev tools for WPF/E? My sources say they are on their way. Supposedly the Visual Studio Web Tools team is working on a family of tools targeting WPF/E. Knowing Microsoft, they'll probably be christened something incredibly boring, like Visual Studio tools for WPF/E. I wouldn't be surprised to hear or see something about these new tools at the Mix '07 conference coming up in Las Vegas at the end of April. Meanwhile, Microsoft is playing beat the clock,
Office 2010 Discount, racing to get its Expression Blend and Expression Designer products done by Mix '07. It's gonna be close. Just last week, Microsoft made available for download Release Candidate (RC) 1 of Blend and Beta 2 of Expression Design. Anyone out there hearing more on Microsoft's plans for WPF/E tools?