Microsoft to preview two Silverlight 4 features

By | September 8, 2009, 11:15am PDT

Summary: Microsoft is slated to show off two features that it is incorporating into the next version of Silverlight, its Internet Explorer plug-in alternative to Adobe Flash at the International Broadcasting Conference (IBC) in Amsterdam, which kicks off on September 11.

Microsoft is slated to show off two features that it is incorporating into the next version of Silverlight, its Internet Explorer browser-plug-in alternative to Adobe Flash at the International Broadcasting Conference (IBC) in Amsterdam, which kicks off on September 11.

According to a September 8 press release, Microsoft plans to add a native multicast capability, as well as support for offline digital rights management (DRM). Microsoft’s PlayReady DRM will work outside the browser with Silverlight 4. (Microsoft first added out-of-browser support to Silverlight with version 3, the final version of which Microsoft released to the Web in July.)

Offline DRM will allow consumers to download a movie and watch it later when they’re offline, even if it is DRM-protected. Microsoft also is touting the out-of-the-browser capability as allowing movie studios to offer network-delivered updates, special offers, live events and other experiences that will “extend their relationship with consumers past the single movie purchase.”

Microsoft officials declined to share any target dates as to when the company is planning to deliver a test build or final version of Silverlight 4. There is a growing Silverlight 4 wish list on Microsoft’s Silverlight site, however.

Microsoft also announced on September 8 plans to release its Internet Information Services (IIS) Smooth Streaming Transport Protocol and Protected Interoperable File Format (PIFF) specification under the Microsoft Community Promise. By doing this, Microsoft is trying to encourage third-party developers to build client-side software and services that interoperate with Smooth Streaming. The Microsoft Community Promise is a Microsoft agreement not to sue developers for patent infringement for a specific technology.

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Mary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 25 years for a variety of publications and Web sites, and is a frequent guest on radio, TV and podcasts, speaking about all things Microsoft-related. She is the author of Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft plans to stay relevant in the post-Gates era (John Wiley & Sons, 2008).

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Mary-Jo Foley

Freelance journalist/blogger Mary Jo Foley has nothing to disclose. WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get). I do not own Microsoft stock or stock in any of its partners or competitors. I have no business ventures that are sponsored by/funded by Microsoft or any of its partners or competitors.

Biography

Mary-Jo Foley

Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 25 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She has kept close tabs on Microsoft strategy, products and technologies for the past 10 years. In the late 1990s, she penned the award-winning "At The Evil Empire" column for ZDNet, and more recently the Microsoft Watch blog for Ziff Davis.

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RE: Microsoft to preview two Silverlight 4 features
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 10th Oct
Troubles really are a element of remaining human. Value your faults for what they might be: helpful nfl football jerseys every day everyday living lessons that might only be found out the complex way. Other than it is a lethal error, which, no less than, countless people today can be taught about from.
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Self serving "Features" ?
rarsa 8th Sep 2009
Woow, since when limiting the rights of users is a "feature" to be desired by users?

How can the article say that SilverLight is an alternative to flash, when Silverlight is a windows-only platform? SilverLight, while technically good, is designed to keep the web clients windows-centric.

Now that there are so many devices out there with internet access and different OS/s it is totally mind blowing that companies would develop apps on Silverlight.

Now it's clear that one reason to do this is to control their customers.

Too bad for all the people that will fall for these apps out of ignorance of the alternatives.

So rounding up:
Silverlight's purpose: Keep the users on Windows.
DRM's purpose: Control how, when and where users watch their content.

How are those "features" that benefit the customer?
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Windows only? Afraid not.
No_Ax_to_Grind 8th Sep 2009
You need to come out of your cave and look around more often.
Linux support is not through Microsoft.

According to Wikipedia: "The Mono team is currently developing Moonlight, a free and open-source implementation of both the Silverlight 1.0 and 2 runtimes."

This doesn't inspire confidence - is it 100% functional? I'm not sure if Silverlight 3 or 4 is even being ported.
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Linux what?
jackbond 8th Sep 2009
Other than from serial killers, there is zero demand for desktop Linux. Why would Microsoft waste their time developing for a dead platform?
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Which all explains why...
zkiwi 8th Sep 2009
Mono was/is a monumental waste of time considering how many versions behind it will pretty much always be.

When Silverlight stops churning, then maybe Mono will be viable, but... don't hold your breath.
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Mono is not that behind
DevGuy_z 9th Sep 2009
It was but they have been doing significant catching up. They support C# 3.0 (lambdas, implicit typing, auto properties, etc) and I think they are about Framework 3 ish

In some areas they are ahead. They have better optimizations than .net and you can directly run assemblies built using VS on it.

The main change was going from framework 1.1 to 2.0 that was a huge change. But there really isn't that much difference going forward so they've done very well recently
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Its the weakness
keoz 11th Sep 2009
of opensource, catch up without a large support is difficult although there are hordes of opensource developers out there, but MS has set everything for they to do it is just a matter of time so they build a strong community that can take Mono to higher levels
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WTF are you talking about
keoz 11th Sep 2009
first Silverlight is for Mac too and for Linux there is Moonlight so don't fckn talk if you don't have an idea what Silverlight is, btw is more secure than flash you know? do you don't, and DRM is good for business you don't want that unauthorized people go and access your protected material
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Late last year I bought this computer PEntium 4 and install windows Vista home 64 bit.
I was all a quiver 64bit huh what an advance from the old Oliviti 286 with math co-processor, my first computer, well it's rinning fine except for update features on some software, Silverlight is one of them, Google Earth another and by this time Google Earth has repaired and reinstall the updates so I can enjoy the program to it's fullest again.
Now with Silver Light coming into it's fouth dimention, isin't it time to repair it for anyone that mistakenly deleted the old install files.....!!!!
it keeps looking for th eold install so that it can rearrange it's self snugly into the regedit file wher (I suppose) it would usually belong, and if it finds something wrong or amiss the new install/upgrade does nothing but tell the computer operator/owner it can't find a old install file it wants to read first before it continues.
What is this a stop work coinvention attitude of silver light producers, I'm still sitting here on silverlight one and the rest of the world is on silverlight four...
can some one please teel the silverlight team to make an update that just does it for me it's installed in the default directory for heavens sake how hard can that be guys...!!!
then we can get on with it and stop worring about all the other computer dummies out there.

your software designers that includes updates for dummies and I'm just a layman software broker to get things fixed that dummies might stuff up on the odd occasion.

I install as if I know nothing about computers and when it goes wrong I find a solution to post on the web or I just give the program and the programmers the thumbs down and rip the program right out of the registery by hand and delete it manually, So far I've found two viruses and the latest one is a trogan my Avaste! virus checker can't fix, and did not find the first time, and superantispyware missed it too, But I didn't it's called "spydll (dot) exe" and is associated with QQ 2009 a instant messengger that the chinese population use and is usually sent inside a (chinesefilename)(dot)scr file... well you get the point I'm sure just so you fella's and fellesses know I'm not really a computer dummies just a stand in for all the learners out there that don't know the back end of a pendrive from the front.
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First Moonlight 2.0 hasn't even been released. By the time it's released, Silverlight will already be at version 4.0

Microsoft's intention is not to have a multiplatform portable implementation. Think about smart phones, how many of those will support Silverlight? Think about smart appliances, PS3, Wii, etc.

Oh, by the way, I'm an Free software advocate using 99% Free software at home. I've been following up moonlight since it's inception.

I think that it would be more important to develop a free software platform with open standards and multiplatform implementation and let Silverlight die the slow death of ActiveX.

Silver light while technically great, is a big trojan horse whose main purpose is not to provide the "functionality" but to lock customers to the MS platform.

I am not criticizing the Mono team, just being objective. They are a very talented team who have very clear objectives. The great thing about Free software is that anyone can do whatever they want. If they want to follow the lead of MS, good, that's their right and they are doing a fine job.

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Silverlight is
keoz 11th Sep 2009
for Mac too and is up to date all time there, also they are planning something to port Silverlight to all kinds of smartphones just like Flash
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RE: Microsoft to preview two Silverlight 4 features
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 10th Oct
Troubles really are a element of remaining human. Value your faults for what they might be: helpful nfl football jerseys every day everyday living lessons that might only be found out the complex way. Other than it is a lethal error, which, no less than, countless people today can be taught about from.

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