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Silverlight 3 – Silverlight 3 was announced on September 12, 2008, and unveiled at MIX09 in Las Vegas on March 18, 2009. [85] A beta version was made available for download the same day. The final version was released July 9, 2009.
Silverlight 2 (previously referred to as version 1.1) [3] includes a version of the .NET Framework, implementing the same full Common Language Runtime (CLR) version as .NET Framework 3.0; so it can execute programs written in any .NET language. (By default, however, reference assemblies compiled with the regular .NET Framework cannot be referenced.
1.1 October 4, 2022 Support for third-party libraries, including Telerik UI for Silverlight. 2.0 October 16, 2023 Support for the VB.NET programming language. 2.1 February 6, 2024 Support for the F# programming language and integration of the Microsoft Silverlight Toolkit. 2.2 April 23, 2024 Support for Visual Studio LightSwitch. 3.0 July 10, 2024
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 ...
Android Studio was announced on May 16, 2013, at the Google I/O conference. It was in early access preview stage starting from version 0.1 in May 2013, then entered beta stage starting from version 0.8 which was released in June 2014. [10] The first stable build was released in December 2014, starting from version 1.0. [11]
The following table lists the .NET implementations that adhere to the .NET Standard and the version number at which each implementation became compliant with a given version of .NET Standard. For example, according to this table, .NET Core 3.0 was the first version of .NET Core that adhered to .NET Standard 2.1.
Microsoft released the first version of the PlayReady suite (Porting Kit for devices, PC SDK and runtime, Server SDK) in June 2008. Silverlight 2.0, released in October 2008, supports content restricted with PlayReady. As of Silverlight 4.0, the implementation of Microsoft PlayReady in Silverlight supports offline content (via persisted license ...