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On December 2, 2010 at the Silverlight Firestarter event, Silverlight 5 beta was announced for release in the 1st half of 2011. The final version was released on December 9, 2011. [37] New features in Silverlight 5 include: [38] Supports GPU accelerated video decoding; Built-in 3D graphics support
A beta version was made available for download the same day. The final version was released July 9, 2009. ... Silverlight 5 – The final version was made available ...
OpenSilver is an open-source framework designed to facilitate the development of rich internet applications (RIAs) using C# and XAML.It was developed as a successor to Microsoft Silverlight, enabling developers to migrate existing Silverlight applications to the web without rewriting their codebase.
The first completed version, Moonlight 1.0, supporting Silverlight 1.0, was released in January 2009. Moonlight 2.0 was released in December 2009. [17] The Moonlight 2.0 release also contained some features of Silverlight 3 including a pluggable media framework which allowed Moonlight to work with pluggable open codecs, such as Theora and Dirac ...
Version 2.0 supported only Silverlight 1.0 applications at release and Microsoft had planned Blend 2.5 for Silverlight 2.0 applications, however the capabilities of the preview version 2.5 have been added to Blend 2.0 Service Pack 1. 3 2009-07-22: Support for PSD and AI files, SketchFlow, [8] TFS support and number of other significant ...
Version 1.0 was released to manufacturing on September 6, 2007. A beta of version 2.0 was released in March 2008 which included new VC-1 codecs (Advanced, Main, and Simple profiles) and better Silverlight support. Version 2 was released to manufacturing in May 2008.
The software release life cycle is the process of developing, testing, and distributing a software product (e.g., an operating system).It typically consists of several stages, such as pre-alpha, alpha, beta, and release candidate, before the final version, or "gold", is released to the public.
Rumors stated that Microsoft was to abandon Silverlight after the upcoming release of version 5 -- this would later turn out to be the case. [10] [11] The combination of these announcements had some proclaiming it "the end of the line for browser plug-ins". [12]