MIX Day 1 Keynote Recap

Hopefully, you kept up with the MIX'10 Day 1 keynote via our live blog. But if not, here's a recap of the day's announcements, courtesy of Microsoft:

MIX10 kicked off today with a keynote from Scott Guthrie, corporate vice president .NET Developer Platform and Joe Belfiore, corporate vice president and director of Windows Phone Program Management. During the keynote, Microsoft unveiled the development platform for the Windows Phone 7 Series that will bring new applications, games and experiences to life. Highlights include:

End-to-End Mobile Development Platform: By combining Silverlight for rich internet applications and the XNA Framework for game development, developers and designers will be able to build visually stunning and immersive applications and games on the Windows Phone 7 Series.

Free Windows Phone Developer Tools: Microsoft has released a free comprehensive tool support package for Silverlight on Windows Phone 7 Series, available for download. Expression Blend for Windows Phone and a preview of Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Express for Windows Phone will be also included as part of the download.

Windows Phone Marketplace: Microsoft made available a new merchandising tool that will enable developers and designers to bring applications and games to market and increase the discoverability of applications with customers while supporting one-time credit card purchases, mobile operator billing and advertising-funded applications.

Silverlight 4 Release Candidate (RC): In addition, Microsoft announced a release candidate (RC) for Silverlight 4 which will enable developers to create and deploy even more robust applications and rich interactive experiences.
Expression Blend 4 Beta: Microsoft revealed a new beta for its design and development workflow tool which includes features such as Path Layout to enable developers and designers to build and animate innovative UI design via ground-breaking visual layout mechanism, without the need to write code. The beta also supports Silverlight 4, .NET Framework 4 and Visual Studio 2010.

Discuss this Article 6

meason
on Mar 15, 2010
Well at least if I decide to develop for Windows Phone I will get a decent set of dev tools most likely. I have used xcode and can't stand it one bit.
anonymous
on Mar 15, 2010
This post was mentioned on Twitter by eoghann_feed: MIX Day 1 Keynote Recap http://bit.ly/dpCDWi
redunion1940
on Mar 15, 2010
since almost no one is posting in this one, OT: Why do you hate the default Windows 7 Taskbar so much I'm about to call old age on this one, is it really so hard to use it, are you sad that FF does not support the spotlight like feature like IE, Opera, Safari, Maxithon, and Sleipnier do for there tabs I mean honestly why do you hate it so much I would find it annoying if I had it set up like that, I know what my pictures are.
panache1023
on Mar 16, 2010
I agree Meason, XCode is really pretty lame compared to Visual Studio. I use xcode because I'm working on an app, but I really wish I could write the code in Visual Studio, which I use everyday at work. Visual Studio may be the best software MS makes.
meason
on Mar 16, 2010
@panache1023 Agreed. VS is probably the best software MS has ever produced. I think apple will be in shock when Windows Phone is released to the consumer oriented market and the legion of .Net developers start working away on apps. I don't know what the ratio of objective C devs is to .Net devs is... but I do know quite a few .Net devs that want to write modern mobile apps but they are not going to go out and learn a whole new lang/platform to do it.
roteague
on Mar 16, 2010
I've already downloaded the WP7 developers tools and started writing a Silverlight app for the phone. !!

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