Microsoft released its very first Beta of Visual Studio 2010 plus the accompanying .Net Framework 4.0 back in Might. On July 28, Microsoft announced it absolutely was releasing a second version of .Net 4.0 Beta 1.Huh? Which was my response when I saw a tweet about this previously these days. (Thank you for that, dotnetangel.)But, sure, it;s accurate, as Senior Vice President of Microsoft;s Developer Division Soma Somasegar blogged currently,
Office Pro Plus 2010 Key, calling the second edition of .Net four.0 Beta one,
Office 2010 Pro, STM.Net (with STM = software transactional memory),
Office 2010 License, an “experimental” release. Somasegar said Microsoft had made the STM.Net code available for download via the MSDN DevLabs site.Somasegar explained more about the new release,
Office 2007 Pro Plus, which is designed with multi-core processing in mind, in his post:“Transactional memory is a technology that frees developers from worrying about the mechanics of fine-grained locking and synchronization in multithreaded applications by providing transactional semantics for reading and writing to memory. It enables developers to focus on application logic instead of the details of memory I/O when building multi-core and many-core programs.”The DevLabs STM team added a few more details.“This is an experimental release of the .NET Framework that allows C# programmers to try out this technology, specifically a particular implementation of STM. We are interested in your feedback on your experience using this programming model. Is it valuable and easy-to-use? Does it provide enough functionality? Are you willing to pay with serial performance losses to gain greater scalability? Our implementation is integrated together with the framework and tools, it has been extended to provide coexistence with locks,
Windows 7 Pro Key, interoperate with traditional transactional technologies, and safely work with existing code.”Microsoft is expected to deliver the final Visual Studio 2010 and .Net 4.0 code in the spring of 2010.