I;m resuming my Microsoft Code Title each day series that I started in December 2006. The goal: To provide the back again story, every day in August,
Office 2010 Home And Student, on 1 of Microsoft;s myriad code names. A number of these code names may be familiar to Microsoft watchers; other people (hopefully) will probably be brand-new.Microsoft code names supply some excellent clues concerning the Redmondians’ advancement priorities, to not mention a much better knowing of which long term Microsoft products match with each other,
Microsoft Office Professional Plus, from a technique standpoint. Instead of every product group is moving to boring, numbered codenames (like Windows seven and Workplace 14).Without further ado, let the codename video games start.Microsoft
code name
of the day:
TolestoMicrosoft code title with the day: TolestoBest guess on what it truly is: The “core” subset of Microsoft;s Common Language Runtime (CLR)Meaning/context of the code title: Tolesto is 1 of three moons that orbit Saturn. (I wonder whether Microsoft has codename plans for the other two, Calypso and Tethys.) one of 48 named moons orbiting Saturn. (Thanks for the reader who sent in the latest NASA link.) If the Core CLR is Tolesto, perhaps the full CLR is Saturn? And Silverlight is the ring around Saturn…? Coincidentally (or not) there are a couple other past and existing Microsoft codenames among the 48 moons,
Office 2010 64bit Key, too, including Janus and Titan.Back again story: AT Mix ‘07, Microsoft acknowledged that it was embedding a subset with the CLR in Silverlight, its Windows Presentation Foundation/Everywhere browser plug-in designed to compete with Adobe Flash. Because the Silverlight plug-in is designed to run on not only Microsoft platforms, but also on Safari and Mozilla browsers on Mac OS X and Linux,
Office Professional Plus 2010 Product Key, too, the CLR can now legitimately be called “cross-platform.”Supplemental info: The Core CLR will include the garbbage collection,
Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2010, type system, generics and many with the other key features that are part of the CLR on the desktop. It won;t include COM interop support and other features “that you don;t need inside a browser,” according to Microsoft.Got a Microsoft code title you’ve been wondering about? Send it my way and I’ll do my best to track down some leads on what it may be.And if you want to keep track with the full month;s worth of Microsoft code names I end up posting, bookmark this “Microsoft Codenames” page. You can also check out this video-whiteboard I did recently on Microsoft codenames.