Monsieur Troup, good to hear from you again! I hope you are doing fine in
the chilly North....
XAML is the WinFX markup language so I could define my UI in XAML and render
it in IE or a Win32 client etc. Have .net 3.0 loaded and see this example.
http://www.mobiform.com/demos/avalonclock/publish.htm
What I was hoping for (and the article I reads intimated was happening) was
that the browser developers were working on a common way to take say
selected .NET assemblies offline and sync up data, state etc when they come
back online (my utopian dream).
-----Original Message-----
From: listbounce_at_securityfocus.com [mailto:listbounce_at_securityfocus.com] On
Behalf Of Henry Troup
Sent: Thursday, February 01, 2007 5:33 PM
To: webappsec_at_securityfocus.com; 'Mark Curphey'
Subject: Re: Next Generation of Browsers
If I read MS's XAML stuff right, there is a possibility there. AKA WPF/E -
see http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/asp.net/bb187358.aspx and FAQ linked
from there:
[quote]
Microsoft "WPF/E" is the next-generation Web platform from Microsoft for
delivering visually stunning and interactive user experiences on the Web and
beyond. Supporting multiple operating systems (Windows and Macintosh),
Microsoft "WPF/E" combines 2D animation, video, and audio within a compact
yet flexible platform. By embracing XML-based presentation with in-line
XAML, AJAX-based applications such as those based on ASP.NET AJAX can be
organically upgraded to take advantage of "WPF/E" in a way that breaks rich
Web-based applications out of the proprietary "black box" they exist in
today.
[/quote]
For "black box" read "sandbox"? The distinction between "rich" and "risky"
could be hard to see ... for a security cynic, like myself.
Henry Troup
--
Henry Troup
htroup_at_acm.org
On Thu Feb 1 10:15 , "Mark Curphey" sent:
>I read an article in a business magazine about software as a service. I
>forget the magazine or I would quote it. In the article the author spoke
>about the next generation of browsers that would allow users to take web
>applications and their data off-line.
>
>Is this a case of a business writer talking tech or does anyone have any
>good articles / blogs / pointers to good material?
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Received on Feb 01 2007