.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. |
.NET Framework Overview Explores the pros and cons of Microsoft's .NET platform, then dishes up some code to demonstrate .NET's language interoperability. By Jerome Kuptz. |
.NET Today Articles about the .NET platform. |
.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. |
15 Seconds: .NET Articles and links on .NET. By internet.com Corp. |
An in-depth look at WMI and instrumentation, Part I WMI stands for Windows Management Instrumentation and, as the name indicates, is about managing your IT infrastructure this article provides an in-depth look at WMI and MOM 2005. |
An in-depth look at WMI and instrumentation, Part II WMI stands for Windows Management Instrumentation and, as the name indicates, is about managing your IT infrastructure this article is the second part of a two-part series. |
Avoiding DLL Hell: Introducing Application Metadata in the Microsoft .NET Framework Describes the use of metadata for easy linking and loading of assemblies, the relationship between metadata and concepts such as IDL and type libraries, and the metadata hierarchy. By Matt Pietrek, MSDN Magazine. |
Back end of .Net eWEEK Labs' tests of betas of Microsoft servers show how the rhetoric meets the road. By Timothy Dyck. |
Deploying .NET Software Components An introduction to .NET Software Components Deployment. By Jean-Claude Batista. |
DevX .NET Zone Articles and discussions on Visual Studio.NET and the .NET Framework. |
Doing .NET In Internet Time Pioneers are testing Microsoft's new architecture, even as components are being released. By Don Kiely. |
From the Frontlines Have Privacy and Security Slipped Through Microsoft's .NET?: Part I. By Jason Harper. |
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 |
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 monit |
i-sources.net Provides a collection of theme based articles for .net developers. |
Introduction to .NET, Hello World, and a Quick Look Inside the .NET Runtime The .NET Framework and Runtime-and why you might care. How to get and install Beta 1 of the .NET Framework SDK and/or Visual Studio.NET. Looks at the metadata and IL for sample programs, and tours the documentation. By Dr. GUI.NET, MSDN. |
Microsoft .NET Framework Component Services, Part 1 Discusses the coding, compilation, and deployment process for writing managed classes that utilize COM+ services. By Jonathan Hawkins and Shannon Pahl, Microsoft Corporation. |
Microsoft .NET vs. J2EE: How Do They Stack Up? A high-level comparison of the two platforms. By Jim Farley, O'Reilly. |
Microsoft Announces Availability of Visual Studio.NET And .NET Framework Beta 1; Submits C# to ECMA Announces public availability and standardization of tools and platform for building Web services. |
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 Sulli |
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. |
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. |
Secure Managed Assembly This article describes a simple yet elegant way of securing managed assemblies from easy disassembly by using the powerful interoperability features of .Net. |
Simplifying Deployment and Solving DLL Hell with the .NET Framework Introduces the concept of an assembly and describes how the .NET Framework uses assemblies to solve versioning and deployment problems. By Steven Pratschner, Microsoft. |
Spider in .NET: Crawl Web Sites and Catalog Info to Any Data Store with ADO.NET and Visual Basic .NET MSDN Magazine article by Mark Gerlach that shows how to write a multi-threaded web crawler using Visual Base .NET . |
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# & |
The Code Project A range of tutorials submitted by site users. |
The Code Project - Jeff Prosise on .NET - Interviews Jeff Prosise from Wintellect has agreed to step up to the podium and give us his thoughts on Life, the Universe, and .NET. Jeff Prosise answers your questions on .NET. By Chris Maunder. |
The Significance of .NET Microsofts latest offers an unprecedented level of language interoperability for Web-based applications. By Bertrand Meyer, Software Development Magazine. |
Using Resources in Visual Studio .NET Visual Studio .NET has poor support for managing project resources such as bitmaps and icons. This is a short tutorial that explains the VS.NET resource management model, points you to a useful tool for editing resources, and provides example code for loa |
Using Windows Forms Controls in ActiveX Containers During the early phase of the .NET Frameworks rollout, there is a high probability that controls authored with Windows Forms will need to be consumed in ActiveX containers such as IE and VB6. This article outlines how to do use Windows Forms controls in V |
Using Windows Forms Controls in Internet Explorer Windows Forms controls within IE are activated without user prompt, require no registration and utilize the Common Language Runtime (CLR) code access security. By Erick Ellis, Microsoft. |
Viewpoint - Microsoft's .NET Strategy Overview and commentary on .NET and C# initiatives. By Gopalan Suresh Raj. |
Visual Studio Unites Seven Languages under the .NET Flag Visual Studio.NET topples cross-language barriers so businesses can produce creative code quicker. By Tom Yager, InfoWorld Test Center. |
Visual Studio.Net: Write Once, Run Everywhere? Microsoft, riding the wave of its newfound popularity as an Internet standards supporter, claims it will do with .NET what Sun refuses to do with Java: push it as an open standard. By Paula Rooney, CRN. |
Welcome to the .NET Channel Columnist Paul Thurrott kicks off the Windows 2000 Magazine Network's .NET Channel. |
XML and SOAP--Essential to .NET To be a player in the .NET development world you must understand XML and SOAP. By Kenn Scribner. |
XML in .NET Microsoft .NET introduces a new suite of XML APIs built on industry standards such as DOM, XPath, XSD, and XSLT. A discussion of the XMLDOM-Document is also included. By Aaron Skonnard, MSDN Magazine. |
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