designed accessible for download a 1st Community Technological innovation Preview (CTP) test develop of a toolkit for building applications and Website online websites incorporating Windows Live providers working with Visual Studio. new toolkit,
Microsoft Office 2010 Key, dubbed “Windows Stay Tools for Visual Studio,” include a number of controls developers can use to create programs that integrate Windows Live facilities. Included in the primary CTP are a contacts control,
Office 2010 Serial Product Key, and ID Login Control,
Windows 7 Enterprise X86, an ID Loginview Control and Silverlight Steaming Media Control. The toolkit will support Visual Studio 2008, initially. Microsoft 1st shared its plans for the Windows Dwell toolkit in September, officials said to expect the new add-ons to work a lot like the Facebook Developer Toolkit that Microsoft announced in May 2007,
Microsoft Office 2007 Product Key, given that the new Visual Studio Toolkit for Windows Reside was being developed by Microsoft’s Doug Handler, who did a lot of the work on the Facebook toolkit. also unveiled this week a couple of other new deliverables of potential interest to developers interested in Windows Stay software and providers. Microsoft built readily available a beta version of the Windows Dwell Messenger application-programming interface (API), as well as the Spaces Photo API that deals with publishing photos inside Windows Stay Spaces, Microsoft’s social-networking/blogging platform. manufactured these Windows-Live developer-focused announcements at the TechEd Developers conference in Barcelona this week. The downloads are on hand from the Microsoft Connect download site. a slide deck outlining the announcements, Angus Logan,
Buy Office 2010, a Technical Product Manager for the Windows Live Platform, summarized Microsoft’s intentions by saying the “Windows Stay platform is opened up. We are providing the tools you use.” surprising to me how little Microsoft is doing to publicize the Windows Stay APIs and tools that it is making available to developers. Instead, the Redmondians are letting Google steal all the thunder — while simultaneously hoping to siphon a little of Google’s momentum choosing a “Fire” based name for the upcoming Microsoft Silverlight developers’ workshop…Microsoft Silverlight Fire Starter vs. Google’s OpenSocial Campfire.