Just read a blog post from the Live team indicating that MEWAs and the Live Framework CTP are going to be removed as of September 8th. Read more for details
Silverlight 3 adds the capability for your applications to be installed and launched out-of-browser. Live Framework MEWAs also have a similar capability for SL2.. How do these capabilities mesh?
In this tutorial, I walk you though the process of upgrading your Silverlight Live Mesh application to be able to store and retrieve data using DataFeeds and DataEntries
This blog post takes a look at Live Mesh and Windows Azure, both part of the larger Azure platform, and describes the technical and practical differences between the two and why you might pick one over the other
Microsoft recently released Silverlight 2.0 to the public. After the Olympic games, Silverlight ended up on a LOT of people's computers, but Silverlight 2 has more importance to application developers in the future. I discuss that in this post
With all of the hype surrounding Cloud computing, Microsoft's upcoming Cloud OS and current efforts around Live Mesh, I thought I would take a trip on the WABAC machine to look at where it all started
With the PDC coming up shortly and Microsoft's trickled announcements of Visual Studio 2010 and the .NET Framework 4.0, what is Microsoft's direction, and will it work for them?
There have recently been some rumored leaks of documents on Microsoft Research's microkernel based managed (mostly) OS codenamed Midori (formerly codenamed Singularity). I am unsurprised to see Mesh integration as a paramount feature
To someone in my position, who follows both Microsoft (.NET) news and Apple (Cocoa) news, the comparing and contrasting between MobileMe and Live Mesh as developer platforms is inevitable. Here's my first stab at a comparison
Microsoft has been working on a new "cloud service" technology called Live Mesh which is currently in beta. Yesterday, Apple let the world know about MobileMe, a new service that might compete directly with Live Mesh.
In this next post in my series on peer networking, I explore the possibility that Windows Live Mesh could represent the next evolution in peer networking and peer application programming
In my series exploring peer networking I've talked about the anatomy of peer networks. In this blog post, I talk about how the WCF Peer Channel enables application developers to build peer applications.
I am an avid consumer of all things related to consumer electronics and all things involving code. However, one thing that I am truly passionate about is networking, and one thing I am OBSESSED with is Peer Networking.