San Jose, California – April 28, 2010 – Microsoft announced that it has launched Silverlight 4 to the Web. The latest version comes with updated tool from Microsoft for Visual Studio 2010, the Silverlight 4 SDK and the release candidate of Expression Blend 4, which supports Silverlight 4. By now you must have listened to about the printing, right-mouse click, microphone, new shapes controls, improved data obligatory and elevated trust features in Silverlight 4. The operational that opens up new prospects for creating business applications is the Silverlight 4.
What you may not understand is that Silverlight 4 maintains extensibility. It distributes with a division of the new Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF) in .NET 4. MEF allows you to modify a Silverlight application or include operational incrementally even after it has been organized, to convince third-party or client requests. The framework is designed to sustain collective apps, but how does that work in a rich Internet application?
The notion of extensible rich Internet apps is tempting because you can begin with a small footprint and then have extensions distributed as it's running, instead of having to stop and download again. Microsoft provides a large rundown of what's new in Silverlight 4. The download for Silverlight 4 is Visual Studio 2010, Silverlight 4 SDK, WCF RIA Services and the Silverlight Toolkit.
Microsoft quickly advances its Silverlight all over the place with Windows Phone 7, Nokia mobile phones, Intel/Broadcom set-top boxes. All developers welcome the new Silverlight designer in Visual Studio 2010 and .NET CLR sustain of the same compiled code for web and desktop apps. The cross-platform maintain isn't on the same route, however. Silverlight 4 works on Internet Explorer, Windows and Windows Phone.