Today Microsoft released "Atlas" or what has become ASP.NET Ajax 1.0. Scott Guthrie has the big news and Mary Jo Foley here on ZDNet has some good information as always. You can go grab the framework ...
Companies are already using Microsoft's ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX features aka "Atlas", a few even in production environments. Customers include social networking powerhouse MySpace, the BBC and emerging Web ...
Microsoft has released a beta version of its AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) programming technology, formerly code-named Atlas and now called Microsoft ASP.Net AJAX v1.0. AJAX has become a ...
This week, Microsoft ASP.NET AJAX hit another milestone by passing the OpenAjax Alliance's InteropFest 1.0 tests. The purpose of the tests is to prove whether an AJAX framework can interoperate with ...
Microsoft on Monday is unveiling its official Atlas technology branding for AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) programming on ASP.Net, and will make the software available sooner than planned. The ...
In the past, Microsoft has said that its ASP.NET AJAX (Atlas) framework could be used sans Microsoft development tools. Particularly, the client-side library in ASP.NET AJAX can interact with several ...
Microsoft Tuesday released a developer tool formerly code-named Atlas for building Web applications based on Ajax. ASP.Net AJAX 1.0 is an add-on framework to Microsoft’s ASP.Net tool that enables ...
Explore ASP.NET AJAX configuration sections in web.config, and learn how handlers and modules fit into the overall picture. In my previous column, I discussed the technologies on which AJAX relies, ...
Microsoft's ASP.Net Ajax framework -- the product formerly code-named "Atlas" -- is done. Microsoft released the tool to the Web for download on January 23. The tool, designed for developers of rich ...