|
|
Home: Programming: Component Frameworks: NET: Articles
Pages: 1 2 [>>]
- .NET and other Proposals
Microsoft, Oracle, and Sun are spelling out their strategy for Web development. All are battling to control the way programs will work in the next few years. By Michael J. Miller, ZDNet.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- .NET Framework Overview
Explores the pros and cons of Micosoft's .NET platform, then dishes up some code to demonstrate .NET's language interoperability. By Jerome Kuptz.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- .NET: Type Fundamentals
Discusses type fundamentals. Starts off by introducing primitive types and then quickly moves on to reference types and value types. By Jeffrey Richter, MSDN Magazine.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- A .NET Primer
Confused about .NET? Robert Hess details a new way to think about the development of applications. By Robert Hess, MSDN.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Back end of .Net
eWEEK Labs' tests of betas of Microsoft servers show how the rhetoric meets the road. By Timothy Dyck.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- From the Frontlines
Have Privacy and Security Slipped Through Microsoft's .NET?: Part I. By Jason Harper.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Garbage Collection: Automatic Memory Management in the Microsoft .NET Framework
Explains how resources are allocated and managed, then gives a description of how the garbage collection algorithm works. Also discussed are the way resources can clean up properly when the garbage collector decides to free a resource's memory and how to force an object to clean up when it is freed. By Jeffrey Richter, MSDN Magazine.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Garbage Collection: Automatic Memory Management in the Microsoft .NET Framework, Part 2
Explains strong and weak object references that help to manage memory for large objects, as well as object generations and how they improve performance. In addition, the use of methods and properties for controlling garbage collection, resources for monitoring collection performance, and garbage collection for multithreaded applications are covered. By Jeffrey Richter, MSDN Magazine.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Microsoft Covets High-end Unix Market
In the continuing quest to move higher into the enterprise data center, Microsoft this week will launch its .NET family of enterprise servers, including Windows 2000 Datacenter Server, the company's most powerful server operating system yet. By Tom Sullivan and Bob Trott.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Microsoft Goes Bonkers
Microsoft's latest announcement, called Microsoft .NET, while touted by the likes of Fortune Magazine as a huge "revolution", is really nothing but vaporware. By Joel Spolsky.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Microsoft's .NET Impact
Exploiting Microsoft's enterprise application strategy, .NET, should prove a dream for IT managers. The pre-beta version is inherently scalable and easy to build and deploy, saving valuable time and resources. By Tom Yager, InfoWorld Test Center.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- Resource Management in .NET
Because the issue of resource management and deterministic finalization is such a sensitive topic, the author is trying to be as precise and complete as he can. By Brian Harry, Microsoft.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- The Advanced C#/.NET Tutorial by Gopalan Suresh Raj
Includes a tutorial on advanced C#/.NET topics like .NET Remoting and Channels, Reflection and Dynamic Method Invocation, Asynchronous Message Queuing using the .NET and COM+ Services, how to make HTTP GET and POST requests on Web Page using ASP+, C# & .NET.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
- The Significance of .NET
MicrosoftÂs latest offers an unprecedented level of language interoperability for Web-based applications. By Bertrand Meyer, Software Development Magazine.
(Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
Rate It
Pages: 1 2 [>>]
|
|
|
Web Hosting
Inkjet Cartridges
Go to my PC
Coupons
Discount Software
|