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A Short Primer on Code Access Security
Microsoft's ClickOnce technology is designed for deploying Windows Forms or Windows Presentation Foundation-based software. ClickOnce is only available in .NET 2.0 and later.
December 29, 2006
Desktop 3D Pulls Up Its Socks
Multicore processors, lightning-fast graphics cards, and cheap memory coupled with the power and affordability of 64-bit software herald a new era in world-class 3D
December 29, 2006
Review: ThinkFree Office Suite Attracts Users -- And Google
The online Office look-alike offers a free word processor, spreadsheet, and presentation package, along with social networking.
December 20, 2006
Taking Control of Page and Control Rendering
What if you want to change the output of a built-in ASP.NET control on a page basis -- without deriving a new control?
December 19, 2006
Identify And Prevent Memory Leaks In Managed Code
Although .NET reduces the need for you to be concerned with memory, you still must pay attention to your application's use of memory to ensure that it is well-behaved and efficient.
December 16, 2006
Using Templates to Customize WPF Controls
The Windows Presentation Foundation template is at the same time simple and powerful.
December 16, 2006
Get Started Writing Gadgets For Windows SideShow Devices
The new Windows SideShow feature very exciting as it offers new ways for users to access and interact with their data.
December 16, 2006
Microsoft Turns Up The Heat On Windows 2000 Users
Companies that rely on Windows 2000 face tough, end-of-lifecycle choices as Microsoft pushes upgrades to Windows Vista, 2003, and Longhorn Server.
December 15, 2006
Survivor's Guide to 2007: Security
This year, security pros will finally get in the groove and refocus on security's primary task: Locking down your company's assets. To get there, however, you need a formidable arsenal. Here's your 2007 shopping list.
December 15, 2006
Developer's Notebook
New development products and new releases of existing ones.
December 13, 2006
Selecting Third-Party Components
Richard offers tips for effectively selecting and using off-the-shelf components.
December 12, 2006
Green Threads
IBM's "green threads" project is an effort to drive better interaction and integration across products and brands.
December 12, 2006
LINQ to Web 2.0
For social bookmarking within an enterprise to be effective, we need a new model.
December 12, 2006
Eclipse Challenges Visual Studio.Net In Europe, Other Regions
The integrated development environment is now used by a third of European, Middle Eastern and African developers
December 11, 2006
Missing The Boat On Multithreading?
It's been 18 months since Intel introduced the first dual-core desktop processor, but only a handful of ISVs have written applications that exploit the multicore architecture. And that's a missed opportunity for PC vendors, commercial ISVs, custom application developers and solution providers serving the mainstream business market.
December 11, 2006
Build Providers in Practice
Build providers are a powerful feature for empowering applications. ASP.NET AJAX uses build providers to create gateway classes that connect to external Web services.
December 5, 2006
The New Security Solutions
Emerging security technology has several admirable goals: proactive, integrated, inferential
December 4, 2006
Inside Microsoft's Labs
It's not every day that Microsoft Research opens up about technologies still in its labs. Here's a look at some things in the security pipeline, from a tool that helps find rootkits to a program that notifies of lost e-mails.
December 4, 2006
Enable Global Apps With Locale Builder And Windows Vista
Microsoft Locale Builder and other similar tools are the first steps towards creating an extensible model for globalization support
December 1, 2006
Operating-System Trends
A reprint from the October, 1992 issue of BYTE magazine.
December 1, 2006
Can Office 2007 Prevail In A Web 2.0 World?
Microsoft will market the hell out of its new Office 2007 lineup, but the company faces hurdles persuading existing MS Office partisans they need the upgrade and also the Web 2.0-stoked perception that no one needs huge applications anymore.
December 1, 2006


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