Microsoft will be releasing .NET versions of existing products as part of its .NET Initiative. Of course a next version of these products would have existed with or without the .NET Initiative. I have heard some folks suggest that this makes .NET nothing more than marketing. I understand where they are coming from, and I disagree.
First, an important part of Microsoft's .NET Initiative is a new and exciting platform called The .NET Frameworks, which I will be discussing shortly. Second, Microsoft has re-focused across its various product groups to address software development in an interconnected world. Lets talk about this for a moment.
After an unsuccessful attempt to develop a mission-critical imaging application in Java, CoreLab moved its development to the .NET Framework, using the Visual Studio IDE and Visual Studio Team Foundation Server.
Software developers,analysis,application developer,or students interested in using .net to develop database application,and wanting to prototype,build and /or integrate windows-based application using .NET.
1. Getting started with .NET Framework 4.0
2. Introducing Visual Studio 2010
3. Introducing Visual Basic 2010
4. Windows Forms in Visual Basic 2010
5. Windows Forms Controlsl
6. The My Object
7. Introducing C# 2010
8. Namespaces, Classes, Objects, and Structs
9. Object-Oriented Programming
10.Pointers, Delegates, and Events
11.Flow Control and Exception Handling
12.Introducing Windows Presentation Foundation
13. Working with WPF 4.0 Controls, Resources, Styles, Templates, and Commands
14. Working with Typography and Documents in WPF
15. .NET and SQL Server
15. Data Access with ADO.NET
16. Working with LINQ
17. Threading
18. Developing a Web Application
19. Navigation Controls: TreeView, Menu, and SiteMapPath
20. Validation Controls
21. Developing ASP.NET AJAX Applications
22. Deploying Windows and Web Applications
23. .NET Remoting
23. Project Work