.NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1 Beta and Expression Blend
Recently, a beta of .NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1 was released. There is currently an incompatibility with Expression Blend/SP1, Expression Blend 2, and Expression Blend 2.5 March 2008 (whose version number is 2.1.1111.0) where Blend will not work if you have .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 Beta installed.
We currently have a version of Expression Blend 2.5 March 2008 Preview (referred to as Blend 2.5 Preview from now on) that fixes this incompatibility, but you will only be able to create and edit WPF and Silverlight 1 projects. While Blend 2.5 Preview will also allow you to create and edit Silverlight 2 projects, they are not supported by Visual Studio at this time. If you are doing any Silverlight 2 development, please do not install .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 Beta until a future Silverlight Tools update is made available.
Download Updated Blend 2.5 Preview
If you downloaded and installed a version of Blend 2.5 Preview prior to May 9th, please uninstall your existing version of Blend 2.5 Preview and install the updated version of from the following link:
Download Refresh of Expression Blend 2.5 March 2008 Preview |
Once you have the latest version of Blend 2.5 Preview installed, you can verify that you are running the latest version if your build number is 2.1.1113.0 by going to Help | About:
If you are running an earlier version of Expression Blend such as V1 or V2, please do not install the .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 Beta. Instead, please wait for the final release of .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 that will be compatible with all versions of Expression Blend.
Sending us Feedback
If you have any questions or encounter other issues while running Expression Blend 2.5 on .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 Beta, please let us know by posting on our forums.
Thanks,
Pete
Update (13 May 2008)
There’s been some confusion around the date of this blog post- the date that it’s picking up is when we originally discovered that we’d have to do an update to Blend coinciding with the 3.5 SP1 Beta and prepared the original draft of the blog post that we’d use to communicate the issue.
The publish date was completely accidental- just a byproduct of trying to coordinate releases. Sorry about the confusion, we really weren’t trying to be sneaky at all!
Comments
Anonymous
May 12, 2008
Earlier today we shipped a public beta of our upcoming .NET 3.5 SP1 and VS 2008 SP1 releases.  TheseAnonymous
May 12, 2008
Earlier today we shipped a public beta of our upcoming .NET 3.5 SP1 and VS 2008 SP1 releases.  TheseAnonymous
May 12, 2008
Earlier today we shipped a public beta of our upcoming .NET 3.5 SP1 and VS 2008 SP1 releases.  TheseAnonymous
May 12, 2008
So we need the SP1 Beta to get ADO Entities to work properly with WCF & Silverlight serialization however if we do so we cannot edit our UI's anymore because Blend 2.5 gets disabled. However VS has no Silverlight designer.. So how are we supposed to operate? I hate to harp but I think Blend needs fixing ASAP because whether I stay non-SP1 or go SP1 I am unable to continue either way.Anonymous
May 12, 2008
Recently, a beta of .NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1 was released. There is currently an incompatibilityAnonymous
May 12, 2008
Recently, a beta of .NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1 was released. There is currently an incompatibilityAnonymous
May 12, 2008
{Copy paste uiteraard....} Earlier today we shipped a public beta of our upcoming .NET 3.5 SP1 and VSAnonymous
May 12, 2008
Synced- For Silverlight development we strongly recommend not installed 3.5 SP1 Beta at this time- Blend will in fact work properly but the Visual Studio tools for Silverlight are not supported at all. Because the majority of Silverlight development requires VS support, we'd suggest waiting until the Silverlight tools for VS support it. Sorry! (and yes, we are working on it)Anonymous
May 12, 2008
The first beta release of Service Pack 1 for both Visual Studio 2008 and .NET Framework 3.5 are available.Anonymous
May 12, 2008
Todos sabreis a estas alturas que el Service Pack 1 de Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 ha aparecido en versiónAnonymous
May 13, 2008
Hi, ScottGu said in his blog "There is a change in behavior in the .NET 3.5 SP1 beta that causes a problem with the shipping versions of Expression Blend. This behavior change is being reverted for the final .NET 3.5 SP1 release, at which time all versions of Blend will have no problems running." I'm curious to know what kind of change broke Blend and why it should be reverted back instead of modifying the app. Thanks.Anonymous
May 13, 2008
I would really appreciate the Silverlight tools to be updated for VS ASAP. There are issues fixed in this SP I specifically need for SL WCF development but since it breaks SL I can't install it. However without installing it WCF is broken without the sp1 fix.. So either way its broken. Thanks and take care.Anonymous
May 13, 2008
El día de ayer Scott gu nos sorprendió con la noticia de que en horas de la mañana seAnonymous
May 13, 2008
The comment has been removedAnonymous
May 13, 2008
Please fix the Silverlight tool for VS ASAP so that it can work with 3.5 sp1 beta. Please...Please...Please!!!Anonymous
May 13, 2008
Yesterday I did a brief post about " WPF 3.5 & VS 2008 SP1 Beta ".  Now I follow itAnonymous
May 14, 2008
is they are in hurry to release new software's without thinking about are previous versions are also supported or notAnonymous
May 14, 2008
Eerder deze week brachten we een publieke betaversie uit van de komende .NET 3.5 SP1 en VS 2008 SP1.Anonymous
May 14, 2008
Eerder deze week brachten we een publieke betaversie uit van de komende .NET 3.5 SP1 en VS 2008 SP1.Anonymous
May 14, 2008
Eerder deze week brachten we een publieke betaversie uit van de komende .NET 3.5 SP1 en VS 2008 SP1.Anonymous
May 15, 2008
【原文地址】 Visual Studio 2008 and .NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1 Beta 【原文发表日期】 Monday, May 12, 2008 9Anonymous
May 18, 2008
Das am 13. Mai v2008 veröffentlichte " Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5 Service pack 1 Beta " harmonisiertAnonymous
June 01, 2008
Setting up your WPF build environment can be a tedious exercise. this weekend, I re-formatted my buildAnonymous
June 02, 2008
Web开发之改进 原文地址】VS2008WebDevelopmentHot-FixRoll-UpAvailable .NET3.5SP1和VS2008SP1内含一堆针对w...Anonymous
June 09, 2008
I've been and I'm a .NET developer for past 15 years, making a living out of it. These days, I'm getting little tired of too many technologies released too quickly by MS, then they are replaced again by other technologies too often. Releasing a service pack for a RTM product is understandable. Why release a Service Pack - Beta? Why can't MS wait and do more testing by your own engineers and then release a finished Service Pack? It is not fair to make thousands of .NET developers to spend hours, to go thorough the installation, troubleshooting, blogging, and all kinds of knowledge sharing, just to use MS products to make a living. IN MY OPINION IT IS TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THE LOYAL DEVELOPERS, COMPLETELY UNFAIR. Has anybody thought this way?Anonymous
June 14, 2008
Kumar: That is really quite impressive. 15 years ago (when you became a .NET developer) was in 1993. Windows 3.11 was quite the rage, especially windows 3.11 for workgroups, which had (gasp) built-in networking. The .NET framework would not even be conceived of for an additional 5 years. It must have been difficult in those early years, developing for a platform years before it had even been specified, quite possibly in a language that didn't exist yet. Perhaps you ment you have been programming windows for 15 years, as have I. I still do not see how additional access to early builds for people who want them is unfair. I agree with you, destabalizing by build enviornment with a beta platform is not a risk I can afford right now, so I'm not participating in this beta. Far from beeing hurt by microsoft offering public beta I don't download, I will get the additional quality in the final bits when they release. Software is different than 15 years ago. Frequent releases are now the rule -- as microsoft painfully discovered in the delayed vista release. New technologies will continue to come out, its called innovation. Pick the ones you need, discard the rest. At any rate I do not see how more (FREE by the way) options than we previously had could be considered taking advantage of anyone.Anonymous
June 15, 2008
Earlier today we shipped a public beta of our upcoming .NET 3.5 SP1 and VS 2008 SP1 releases. These servicing