NAB - Microsoft unveils Silverlight as Flash killer
By Elizabeth Montalbano
,
IDG News Service
, 04/16/2007
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Microsoft this week will reveal new technology to deliver rich media applications on the Web, part of a broader strategy to go head
to head with Web and design tools powerhouse Adobe.
As described by Forest Key, a director of product management for Microsoft's Server and Tools Division, Silverlight is a browser
plug-in that allows Web content providers to offer rich video and interactive media experience from directly within Web sites.
The technology, which leverages Vista's new graphics framework Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF), will debut at the National
Association of Broadcasters (NAB) conference, being held this week in Las Vegas.
Microsoft also will unveil Web content providers who have signed up to use the technology once it is available, including
Akamai Technologies, Brightcove, Eyeblaster, Major League Baseball and Netflix.
Key said Microsoft is targeting three core audiences with Silverlight, formerly code-named WPF/E: content providers that want
to distribute video and rich media over the Web; designers and developers that are building rich interactive applications;
and end users that want the best possible experience when viewing Web-based media.
Silverlight is compatible with a range of browsers, including Internet Explorer (IE), Safari and Firefox. As demonstrated
by Key, the technology delivers a similar user experience on both IE 7 running on Windows Vista and Firefox running on an
Apple Macintosh computer. In fact, a big benefit of the technology for end users is that they will not have to download different
video player technology to view online media based on what OS they are running, Key said.
Microsoft is highlighting the video-delivery capabilities of Silverlight at NAB, but the company plans to show how companies
can use Silverlight in a similar way to Adobe's Flash to deliver Web-based applications that use animation and other rich
media, Key said.
Microsoft also plans to optimize other components of its software platform to add value to Silverlight. For example, the forthcoming
Windows Server, code-named Longhorn, will include as a plug-in the IIS7 Media Pack, which adds new features to enhance and
reduce the cost of delivering rich media over the Web.
Microsoft's Expression toolset to build rich Internet applications -- which Microsoft is pitting as an alternative to Adobe's
recently released Creative Suite 3 -- also is key to Silverlight because designers will use it to create application to be
delivered through the technology. Expression should be generally available in June.
Keith Cutcliffe, IT developer and analyst for ProAssurance in Birmingham, Ala., is skeptical that Microsoft will ever gain
the faithful user base Adobe has. However, he said that enterprise customers that have developed Flash applications to run
on Microsoft-based Web infrastructure eventually may use Silverlight and Expression instead because of the underlying back-end
platform ties.
Scott Stanfield, CEO of application development firm Vertigo Software, seems supportive of that sentiment. He said Silverlight
fills a major gap in Microsoft's strategy to provide a mechanism to deliver and build applications that provide the stability
of desktop applications with the user experience of media-rich Web applications.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
Comments (2)
Mobile WiMAX- What to Expect at NAB 2008!By Amitabh on April 8, 2008, 9:18 amMobile WiMAX- What to Expect at NAB 2008? WiMAX has not been a very visible feature in the NAB at least in the past. NAB with its focus on broadcast products, media...
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Mobile WiMAX: Updates from NAB 2008By Amitabh on April 21, 2008, 9:46 amNAB has not been a fora where wireless or WiMAX technologies take centre stage. This privilege is normally associated with events such as the WiMAX Forum World Congress,...
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