Visual Programming Language (VPL)
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From http://www.techagility.info/2007/10/10/microsoft-embedded-oss-where-to-next-do-we-really-want-vista-embedded/[^] In his keynote at the Embedded Systems Conference (ESC) last month, Kevin Dallas, GM of Microsoft’s Windows Embedded unit, [...] revealed a new tool called the Visual Programming Language (VPL), [...] which will allow developers to use a graphical user interface to link services together. A manage code runtime environment, such as .NET Compact Framework, is no longer required, according to Hall. Instead, Hall said, WSD (Web Services on Devices) applications can be written in C or C++.
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From http://www.techagility.info/2007/10/10/microsoft-embedded-oss-where-to-next-do-we-really-want-vista-embedded/[^] In his keynote at the Embedded Systems Conference (ESC) last month, Kevin Dallas, GM of Microsoft’s Windows Embedded unit, [...] revealed a new tool called the Visual Programming Language (VPL), [...] which will allow developers to use a graphical user interface to link services together. A manage code runtime environment, such as .NET Compact Framework, is no longer required, according to Hall. Instead, Hall said, WSD (Web Services on Devices) applications can be written in C or C++.
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From http://www.techagility.info/2007/10/10/microsoft-embedded-oss-where-to-next-do-we-really-want-vista-embedded/[^] In his keynote at the Embedded Systems Conference (ESC) last month, Kevin Dallas, GM of Microsoft’s Windows Embedded unit, [...] revealed a new tool called the Visual Programming Language (VPL), [...] which will allow developers to use a graphical user interface to link services together. A manage code runtime environment, such as .NET Compact Framework, is no longer required, according to Hall. Instead, Hall said, WSD (Web Services on Devices) applications can be written in C or C++.
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From http://www.techagility.info/2007/10/10/microsoft-embedded-oss-where-to-next-do-we-really-want-vista-embedded/[^] In his keynote at the Embedded Systems Conference (ESC) last month, Kevin Dallas, GM of Microsoft’s Windows Embedded unit, [...] revealed a new tool called the Visual Programming Language (VPL), [...] which will allow developers to use a graphical user interface to link services together. A manage code runtime environment, such as .NET Compact Framework, is no longer required, according to Hall. Instead, Hall said, WSD (Web Services on Devices) applications can be written in C or C++.