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  3. Open plea for wpf / silverlight's future

Open plea for wpf / silverlight's future

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  • M Member 96

    I saw a small discussion on this issue here a couple of days ago and apparently no one was very concerned despite the growing evidence that there is more than smoke to this which makes me wonder what exactly people are coding in for a living these days. Anyway for anyone who actually makes a living with these tools and who would like some clarity from Microsoft, this guy is asking for it: http://forums.silverlight.net/forums/t/230744.aspx[^]


    There is no failure only feedback

    _ Offline
    _ Offline
    _beauw_
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    I tend to discount any claim from Microsoft that one of their technologies is going away. Look at COM, for example. Don Box wrote an article in MSDN Magazine titled "Is COM Dead?" in 1999 or 2000. Since then, Microsoft has released a host of post-.COM technologies and platforms. And yet COM is still the heart of Office automation (e.g. the PIAs), Direct X, and so on. When .NET 1.0 came out, I thought the PIAs would be an interim step. Almost ten years later, the PIAs are still around (and I'm a bit less naive).

    M 1 Reply Last reply
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    • H Henry Minute

      This[^] (from today's The Insider) may shed some light.

      Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.” I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus! When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.

      M Offline
      M Offline
      Member 96
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      Yeah, I like this bit: "It definitely seems Microsoft’s ultimate goal is to wean developers off Silverlight and to convince them to use HTML5 and JavaScript to write new apps for Windows, going forward. "


      There is no failure only feedback

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • _ _beauw_

        I tend to discount any claim from Microsoft that one of their technologies is going away. Look at COM, for example. Don Box wrote an article in MSDN Magazine titled "Is COM Dead?" in 1999 or 2000. Since then, Microsoft has released a host of post-.COM technologies and platforms. And yet COM is still the heart of Office automation (e.g. the PIAs), Direct X, and so on. When .NET 1.0 came out, I thought the PIAs would be an interim step. Almost ten years later, the PIAs are still around (and I'm a bit less naive).

        M Offline
        M Offline
        Member 96
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        No one is suggesting they are going away completely. What is being suggested is they are being deprecated, actually that's not a suggestion, they clearly *are* deprecating silverlight and WPF in particular, they've announced it with the windows 8 stuff.


        There is no failure only feedback

        A 1 Reply Last reply
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        • M Member 96

          I saw a small discussion on this issue here a couple of days ago and apparently no one was very concerned despite the growing evidence that there is more than smoke to this which makes me wonder what exactly people are coding in for a living these days. Anyway for anyone who actually makes a living with these tools and who would like some clarity from Microsoft, this guy is asking for it: http://forums.silverlight.net/forums/t/230744.aspx[^]


          There is no failure only feedback

          V Offline
          V Offline
          Vark111
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          I agree with some of the posters on there that this sounds like Sinofsky getting in a pissing match with DevDiv, rather than any real DevDiv direction to abandon WPF/Silverlight.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

            John C wrote:

            there is more than smoke

            Really? At least I am sure about one thing - SilverLight will not be abandoned. In that case Windows Phone 7 will be abandoned (ok may be a possibility considering dismal sales performance). But SilverLight is used in many web sites and anywhere you have HTML you can put SilverLight including the tiles. This whole thing is being blown out of proportion. WPF - I think it will be good if it is discontinued in the current form and merged with SilverLight. Which is going to happen sooner or later as they are very similar but miles apart in performance.

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Jeremy Hutchinson
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

            WPF - I think it will be good if it is discontinued in the current form and merged with SilverLight.

            I spoke with one of the WPF/Silverlight bigwigs at PDC a couple of years ago and he said that as much as possible that is the plan. Silverlight has always been a subset of WPF (it was originally called WPF Everywhere remember), and they keep closing the gap between it an WPF with each release.

            Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

            Which is going to happen sooner or later as they are very similar but miles apart in performance.

            I hadn't heard there was a performance difference. Which is faster, and do you have some examples to back up that claim (not that I wouldn't take you at your word)?

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • M Member 96

              I saw a small discussion on this issue here a couple of days ago and apparently no one was very concerned despite the growing evidence that there is more than smoke to this which makes me wonder what exactly people are coding in for a living these days. Anyway for anyone who actually makes a living with these tools and who would like some clarity from Microsoft, this guy is asking for it: http://forums.silverlight.net/forums/t/230744.aspx[^]


              There is no failure only feedback

              D Offline
              D Offline
              Dario Solera
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              I would just love a completely web-based world. I couldn't care less about desktop applications and even less about Silverlight/Flash "apps". Everything on the web, everything available from anywhere. We're still far from there, but I am actively working towards that direction. When I occasionally have to develop a small desktop application, well it just feels wrong. So, no guys, I'm not going to plea for WPF or Silverlight. HTML for the world.

              If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe, but not a personality. [Charlie Brooker] ScrewTurn Wiki, Software Localization Tools & Services and My Blog

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              • D Dario Solera

                I would just love a completely web-based world. I couldn't care less about desktop applications and even less about Silverlight/Flash "apps". Everything on the web, everything available from anywhere. We're still far from there, but I am actively working towards that direction. When I occasionally have to develop a small desktop application, well it just feels wrong. So, no guys, I'm not going to plea for WPF or Silverlight. HTML for the world.

                If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe, but not a personality. [Charlie Brooker] ScrewTurn Wiki, Software Localization Tools & Services and My Blog

                M Offline
                M Offline
                Member 96
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                If Microsoft started a massive effort to come up with a kick ass development environment and tools targetting HTML 5 and *all* hardware platforms suitable for doing line of business apps then I'd be firmly in your camp. I absolutely detest the fact that we can't write an app and run it everywhere, anything less is completely illogical but unfortunately that's just the way it is. I'm hedging my bets and making a wpf / silverlight and html 5 interface for the app I'm working on now just to be on the safe side.


                There is no failure only feedback

                D C 2 Replies Last reply
                0
                • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                  John C wrote:

                  there is more than smoke

                  Really? At least I am sure about one thing - SilverLight will not be abandoned. In that case Windows Phone 7 will be abandoned (ok may be a possibility considering dismal sales performance). But SilverLight is used in many web sites and anywhere you have HTML you can put SilverLight including the tiles. This whole thing is being blown out of proportion. WPF - I think it will be good if it is discontinued in the current form and merged with SilverLight. Which is going to happen sooner or later as they are very similar but miles apart in performance.

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  Steve Maier
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  I work on using WPF in medical devices and you would have to be able to talk to drivers directly, use C++ libs compiled with managed C++ to talk to vendor hardware, and other things that WPF can do today. Plus it needs to be something that can keep up with high frame rates to show the data in "real time". There is alot of our competitors doing the same things with WPF as well.

                  Steve Maier

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                  • M Member 96

                    If Microsoft started a massive effort to come up with a kick ass development environment and tools targetting HTML 5 and *all* hardware platforms suitable for doing line of business apps then I'd be firmly in your camp. I absolutely detest the fact that we can't write an app and run it everywhere, anything less is completely illogical but unfortunately that's just the way it is. I'm hedging my bets and making a wpf / silverlight and html 5 interface for the app I'm working on now just to be on the safe side.


                    There is no failure only feedback

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    Dario Solera
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    John C wrote:

                    we can't write an app and run it everywhere

                    Yes we can. It's called HTML+CSS+JavaScript. We can do it now. We build two quite large web applications and we support something like 94% of the users, according to the latest browser market share stats. If only we could get rid of IE6 and we'd be at 100%. One codebase, unlimited platforms. Of course we don't target mobile devices (yet) but simply because, in our case, it doesn't make sense to use our applications on a tiny screen with a tiny keyboard. But, I guarantee that there is very little you can't do in HTML when talking about business and productivity applications for desktop and even pad users. Mobile phones are another story, but after all there's only so much you can do on a tiny screen - regardless of how the application is built. Even so, I find lots of good mobile web apps. Flickr, for example, is excellent.

                    If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe, but not a personality. [Charlie Brooker] ScrewTurn Wiki, Software Localization Tools & Services and My Blog

                    M 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M Member 96

                      I saw a small discussion on this issue here a couple of days ago and apparently no one was very concerned despite the growing evidence that there is more than smoke to this which makes me wonder what exactly people are coding in for a living these days. Anyway for anyone who actually makes a living with these tools and who would like some clarity from Microsoft, this guy is asking for it: http://forums.silverlight.net/forums/t/230744.aspx[^]


                      There is no failure only feedback

                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      Pete OHanlon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      Unfortunately I can't go into some of the details of discussions that I have had with actual MS staffers working on the SL/WPF teams, but it was this mass panic that led me to write this[^] post. The problem with the demonstration is simple; they were demoing new technology - from a marketing point of view, there's no excitement in saying "your old stuff will continue to run". In typical MS evangelism terms, this is a marketing SNAFU, it's not a developer FUBAR. Your .NET investment is safe, will continue to be safe for a very long time. As a dev, I'm excited about being able to write code that works on an ARM tablet, and that also runs on my desktop PC. The same people complaining about having to work with the Metro UI are now complaining about having to write JavaScript - if you don't want to, you don't have to; that is not going to change. There have been comments that WPF is no longer being actively developed, and I was worried about this for a while until someone I trust very much reassured me that the slower release cycle on WPF did not mean that it was no longer getting the love; it's a mature platform now, so exciting new features are fewer and further apart. Instead, smaller tweaks and enhancements are taking place on it, some of which are absolutely fantastic. I'm giving nothing away here when I tell you that there are going to be enhancements to the data binding engine, and that the airspace issue is being sorted out at long last.

                      Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                      My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                      C M B 3 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • M Member 96

                        I saw a small discussion on this issue here a couple of days ago and apparently no one was very concerned despite the growing evidence that there is more than smoke to this which makes me wonder what exactly people are coding in for a living these days. Anyway for anyone who actually makes a living with these tools and who would like some clarity from Microsoft, this guy is asking for it: http://forums.silverlight.net/forums/t/230744.aspx[^]


                        There is no failure only feedback

                        W Offline
                        W Offline
                        wout de zeeuw
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        There is only so much room for facebook and twitter clones in html and js. The majority needs more power, so .NET and Silverlight will stay alive *crossing fingers*.

                        Wout

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • P Pete OHanlon

                          Unfortunately I can't go into some of the details of discussions that I have had with actual MS staffers working on the SL/WPF teams, but it was this mass panic that led me to write this[^] post. The problem with the demonstration is simple; they were demoing new technology - from a marketing point of view, there's no excitement in saying "your old stuff will continue to run". In typical MS evangelism terms, this is a marketing SNAFU, it's not a developer FUBAR. Your .NET investment is safe, will continue to be safe for a very long time. As a dev, I'm excited about being able to write code that works on an ARM tablet, and that also runs on my desktop PC. The same people complaining about having to work with the Metro UI are now complaining about having to write JavaScript - if you don't want to, you don't have to; that is not going to change. There have been comments that WPF is no longer being actively developed, and I was worried about this for a while until someone I trust very much reassured me that the slower release cycle on WPF did not mean that it was no longer getting the love; it's a mature platform now, so exciting new features are fewer and further apart. Instead, smaller tweaks and enhancements are taking place on it, some of which are absolutely fantastic. I'm giving nothing away here when I tell you that there are going to be enhancements to the data binding engine, and that the airspace issue is being sorted out at long last.

                          Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                          My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                          C Offline
                          C Offline
                          Christian Graus
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          It'd be nice if they fixed the hideous bugs in WPF at some point....

                          Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

                          P 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • C Christian Graus

                            It'd be nice if they fixed the hideous bugs in WPF at some point....

                            Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

                            P Offline
                            P Offline
                            Pete OHanlon
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            At least some are being fixed.

                            Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                            My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • P Pete OHanlon

                              Unfortunately I can't go into some of the details of discussions that I have had with actual MS staffers working on the SL/WPF teams, but it was this mass panic that led me to write this[^] post. The problem with the demonstration is simple; they were demoing new technology - from a marketing point of view, there's no excitement in saying "your old stuff will continue to run". In typical MS evangelism terms, this is a marketing SNAFU, it's not a developer FUBAR. Your .NET investment is safe, will continue to be safe for a very long time. As a dev, I'm excited about being able to write code that works on an ARM tablet, and that also runs on my desktop PC. The same people complaining about having to work with the Metro UI are now complaining about having to write JavaScript - if you don't want to, you don't have to; that is not going to change. There have been comments that WPF is no longer being actively developed, and I was worried about this for a while until someone I trust very much reassured me that the slower release cycle on WPF did not mean that it was no longer getting the love; it's a mature platform now, so exciting new features are fewer and further apart. Instead, smaller tweaks and enhancements are taking place on it, some of which are absolutely fantastic. I'm giving nothing away here when I tell you that there are going to be enhancements to the data binding engine, and that the airspace issue is being sorted out at long last.

                              Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                              My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Member 96
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                              from a marketing point of view, there's no excitement in saying "your old stuff will continue to run"

                              The stupidest marketer in the world would probably still have been able to summon up the neurons required to include one sentence along the lines of "In addition to the great platforms of silverlight wpf blah blah we now will support this...." Honestly if not one person involved could have forseen this issue after the last time they pulled this stunt you have to start wondering if it's really possible for this big a company to be so abjectly incompetent or is there actually fire where all this smoke keeps coming from. I don't buy it sorry. No one is that incompetent, they just can't be. If the best info we can get on this is supposed to be from private discussions with insiders in M.S. I'm not in any sense of the world relieved, only more disquieted by your post.

                              Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                              here have been comments that WPF is no longer being actively developed, and I was worried about this for a while until someone I trust very much reassured me that the slower release cycle on WPF did not mean that it was no longer getting the love; it's a mature platform now, so exciting new features are fewer and further apart.

                              Sure, did you honestly believe that or were you just hoping? :) Seriously are you familiar at all with WPF? Maturity is pretty fucking far from how I'd describe it.


                              There is no failure only feedback

                              P L 2 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • W wout de zeeuw

                                There is only so much room for facebook and twitter clones in html and js. The majority needs more power, so .NET and Silverlight will stay alive *crossing fingers*.

                                Wout

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Member 96
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                Business people unfortunately can't get by on crossed fingers, we need certainty and clarity and without it we will go where we can get it.


                                There is no failure only feedback

                                G 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • M Member 96

                                  Business people unfortunately can't get by on crossed fingers, we need certainty and clarity and without it we will go where we can get it.


                                  There is no failure only feedback

                                  G Offline
                                  G Offline
                                  gavindon
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  John C wrote:

                                  without it we will go where we can get it.

                                  just curious where that is.... seems to me thats its MS and their constant flubs, uncertainty, or Isheeple with their nazi attitudes over what we can and cant do with our their pcs that they were so gracious as to let us mortals buy from them for insane prices. One thing is for certain, whatever MS does, a very large portion of the population will still be using it for decades to come. I'm not to worried though, unless you are running on the cutting edge, hell people will still be using xp or weven for a few more years yet. they can play with 8 all they want for the masses, by the time companies(especially smaller to midsized ones with limited tech budgets) upgrade past weven, they will be on version 12 anyway :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

                                  Programming is a race between programmers trying to build bigger and better idiot proof programs, and the universe trying to build bigger and better idiots, so far... the universe is winning. A graduation ceremony is an event where the commencement speaker tells thousands of students dressed in identical caps and gowns that 'individuality' is the key to success

                                  V M 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • M Member 96

                                    Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                                    from a marketing point of view, there's no excitement in saying "your old stuff will continue to run"

                                    The stupidest marketer in the world would probably still have been able to summon up the neurons required to include one sentence along the lines of "In addition to the great platforms of silverlight wpf blah blah we now will support this...." Honestly if not one person involved could have forseen this issue after the last time they pulled this stunt you have to start wondering if it's really possible for this big a company to be so abjectly incompetent or is there actually fire where all this smoke keeps coming from. I don't buy it sorry. No one is that incompetent, they just can't be. If the best info we can get on this is supposed to be from private discussions with insiders in M.S. I'm not in any sense of the world relieved, only more disquieted by your post.

                                    Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                                    here have been comments that WPF is no longer being actively developed, and I was worried about this for a while until someone I trust very much reassured me that the slower release cycle on WPF did not mean that it was no longer getting the love; it's a mature platform now, so exciting new features are fewer and further apart.

                                    Sure, did you honestly believe that or were you just hoping? :) Seriously are you familiar at all with WPF? Maturity is pretty fucking far from how I'd describe it.


                                    There is no failure only feedback

                                    P Offline
                                    P Offline
                                    Pete OHanlon
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    John C wrote:

                                    Seriously are you familiar at all with WPF?

                                    John. How long have I been here? You still don't know that I'm a f***ing WPF developer? While I'm the first to admit that WPF is not the platform I'd hoped it could be, the fixes that are going in there can't compare to the frantic release cycle of SL because SL was playing catch up. Go on, what would you put into WPF that's new? My list of features are fixes rather than completely new functionality. Frankly, the level of FUD that is being spread is just irresponsible. Win 8 has already been demoed running traditional desktop applications. We have heard many times that different MS technologies are dead, and yet they still go on. MFC is dead. Ooh look it's still going strong. COM is dead. Guess what, Win8 will have uprated COM. Visual Basic is dead... ooh look it's still going. The list goes on. Still, if you want to spread more of this "the sky is falling" then fly at it. While you are panicking, I'm going to be happily continuing to develop in WPF and Silverlight.

                                    Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                                    My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                                    M 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • G gavindon

                                      John C wrote:

                                      without it we will go where we can get it.

                                      just curious where that is.... seems to me thats its MS and their constant flubs, uncertainty, or Isheeple with their nazi attitudes over what we can and cant do with our their pcs that they were so gracious as to let us mortals buy from them for insane prices. One thing is for certain, whatever MS does, a very large portion of the population will still be using it for decades to come. I'm not to worried though, unless you are running on the cutting edge, hell people will still be using xp or weven for a few more years yet. they can play with 8 all they want for the masses, by the time companies(especially smaller to midsized ones with limited tech budgets) upgrade past weven, they will be on version 12 anyway :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

                                      Programming is a race between programmers trying to build bigger and better idiot proof programs, and the universe trying to build bigger and better idiots, so far... the universe is winning. A graduation ceremony is an event where the commencement speaker tells thousands of students dressed in identical caps and gowns that 'individuality' is the key to success

                                      V Offline
                                      V Offline
                                      Vark111
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      gavindon wrote:

                                      hell people will still be using xp or weven for a few more years yet

                                      My organization has a 6 year upgrade cycle that flows throughout the company. People will only get a new OS with a new machine. I got a new machine last month. It has XP on it. Therefore, 5+ years from now I will still be on XP with IE6. (don't know whether to put a smiley face because I proved your point, or a sad face because I proved your point)

                                      G 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • M Member 96

                                        If Microsoft started a massive effort to come up with a kick ass development environment and tools targetting HTML 5 and *all* hardware platforms suitable for doing line of business apps then I'd be firmly in your camp. I absolutely detest the fact that we can't write an app and run it everywhere, anything less is completely illogical but unfortunately that's just the way it is. I'm hedging my bets and making a wpf / silverlight and html 5 interface for the app I'm working on now just to be on the safe side.


                                        There is no failure only feedback

                                        C Offline
                                        C Offline
                                        Chris Maunder
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        John C wrote:

                                        I absolutely detest the fact that we can't write an app and run it everywhere

                                        Yeah - bring back Java!

                                        cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                        M 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • M Member 96

                                          No one is suggesting they are going away completely. What is being suggested is they are being deprecated, actually that's not a suggestion, they clearly *are* deprecating silverlight and WPF in particular, they've announced it with the windows 8 stuff.


                                          There is no failure only feedback

                                          A Offline
                                          A Offline
                                          AspDotNetDev
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          John C wrote:

                                          they clearly *are* deprecating silverlight and WPF in particular, they've announced it with the windows 8 stuff

                                          Where did they announce that? Link?

                                          [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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