Are you still afraid?
Still think Windows 8 means the death of Silverlight and .Net?
Of note are the sentences where Julie Larson-Green states that the XAML team has been working side by side the whole time, and well, in the exact same sentence actually, the point where she states that it is now formal.
If the XAML team is now part of the Windows 8 dev team and the least amount of new work would need to be put in the legacy shell, you can but your butt they are very likely deeply involved in the next gen shell.
Hopefully the nay saying will quiet down a bit now.
On an interesting note in there was the notice that the XAML developers for XBox and Browser plugins would now be working on Windows Phone. While the first "shift" of the XAML for Windows team moving into Windows Dev seems natural given the UI and the rumours about Jupiter, this second one seems less of a natural progression and definitely of note. Also gives me a bit more faith in Microsofts investment in Windows Phone.
Of note are the sentences where Julie Larson-Green states that the XAML team has been working side by side the whole time, and well, in the exact same sentence actually, the point where she states that it is now formal.
If the XAML team is now part of the Windows 8 dev team and the least amount of new work would need to be put in the legacy shell, you can but your butt they are very likely deeply involved in the next gen shell.
Hopefully the nay saying will quiet down a bit now.
On an interesting note in there was the notice that the XAML developers for XBox and Browser plugins would now be working on Windows Phone. While the first "shift" of the XAML for Windows team moving into Windows Dev seems natural given the UI and the rumours about Jupiter, this second one seems less of a natural progression and definitely of note. Also gives me a bit more faith in Microsofts investment in Windows Phone.
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