Microsoft Developer Platform at a Glance
This is my yearly roundup of the Microsoft developer platform. It includes Visual Studio 2012, .NET Framework 4.5, Windows Azure, Windows Phone, Office 2013, and more.
I’ve included key links and starting points at the end to help you find your way around the vast Microsoft technical playground.
Here are some links you may find useful ...
Key Links
Dev Centers
- Office Dev Center
- Visual Studio Dev Center
- Windows Azure Dev Center
- Windows Dev Center
- Windows Phone Dev Center
Getting Started
- Getting Started with .NET Framework 4.5
- Getting Started with Visual C#
- Getting Started with Visual C++
- Top Silverlight Features
- Windows Store App Development
What’s New
- New Namespaces in .NET Framework 4.5
- What’s New in the .NET Framework 4.5
- What’s New in F# in Visual Studio 2012
- What’s New in IIS 8
- What’s New in SQL Server 2012 Database Engine
- What’s New in Visual C# for Visual Studio 2012
- What’s New in Visual C++ for Visual Studio 2012
You Might Also Like
- Office 365 at a Glance
- Windows Azure at a Glance
- Microsoft Explained: Making the Most of the Microsoft Platform Story
- The Microsoft Story
Comments
Anonymous
December 30, 2012
Some glaring omissions: DirectX C++ AMP HPC ServerAnonymous
December 31, 2012
@ Josh -- Thank you. C++ AMP is definitely worth adding. Done. I can't find a page on DirectX that I'd want to point to. The page on HPC Server I found shows 2008: http://www.microsoft.com/hpc/Anonymous
January 07, 2013
JD: Thank you for taking the time to compile this list, as I have previously communicated this is a very useful way of navigating the Microsoft application space and something that I wish someone editing MSDN would recognise and provide (and maintain). Sometime there is simply too much content to deal with without something like this.Anonymous
January 07, 2013
@ Carl -- Thank you. Information Architecture is always a challenge with gigantic warehouses of content. One of my last projects a few moons back was helping MSDN with their IA. I was amazed by the sheer volume and entry points and what it takes to really create a simple, but useful experience. I think that experience really taught me the value of being able to start simple, but be able to really dive into the complex and complete.