Rockford Lhotka
 Monday, March 02, 2009
« Setting up a basic n-tier CSLA .NET for ... | Main | CSLA .NET 3.6.2 beta release »
Parallel and Concurrency Futures for Microsoft Developers

My article providing an overview of some of the parallel and concurrent programming features coming in .NET 4.0 is online:

Parallel and Concurrency Futures for Microsoft Developers

Microsoft .NET
Monday, March 02, 2009 2:34:11 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Related posts:
Projecting js code from a .NET business layer
Windows 8 Terminology and Concepts
CSLA data portal changes in version 4.5
Using the MVVM pattern requires a framework
VS10 and SQL Express frustration
Silverlight 6 doesn’t matter

On this page....
Parallel and Concurrency Futures for Microsoft Developers
Tags
Architecture (45) Books (56) Bxf (4) CSLA .NET (283) dasBlog (2) Distributed OO (30) git (1) h5js (3) JavaScript (1) Magenic (14) Microsoft .NET (90) mono (2) MonoDroid (5) MonoTouch (4) MOslo (7) News (42) Programming (20) Service-Oriented (43) Silverlight (95) WCF (9) Web (16) Windows 8 (28) Windows Azure (6) Windows Forms (5) Windows Phone (14) WinRT (42) WomenInTech (1) Workflow (3) WP7 (15) WP8 (2) WPF (45) Xbox (2) Zune (1)
Search
Archives
<May 2013>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2829301234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930311
2345678

Feed your aggregator (RSS 2.0)
Navigation
Home
CSLA .NET
Magenic Custom Application Development
Architect blog index
Microsoft Regional Director
Microsoft MVP
Categories
May, 2013 (2)
April, 2013 (2)
March, 2013 (3)
February, 2013 (7)
January, 2013 (4)
December, 2012 (3)
November, 2012 (3)
October, 2012 (7)
September, 2012 (1)
August, 2012 (4)
July, 2012 (3)
June, 2012 (5)
May, 2012 (4)
April, 2012 (6)
March, 2012 (10)
February, 2012 (2)
January, 2012 (2)
December, 2011 (4)
November, 2011 (6)
October, 2011 (14)
September, 2011 (5)
August, 2011 (3)
June, 2011 (2)
May, 2011 (1)
April, 2011 (3)
March, 2011 (6)
February, 2011 (3)
January, 2011 (6)
December, 2010 (3)
November, 2010 (8)
October, 2010 (6)
September, 2010 (6)
August, 2010 (7)
July, 2010 (8)
June, 2010 (6)
May, 2010 (8)
April, 2010 (13)
March, 2010 (7)
February, 2010 (5)
January, 2010 (9)
December, 2009 (6)
November, 2009 (8)
October, 2009 (11)
September, 2009 (5)
August, 2009 (5)
July, 2009 (10)
June, 2009 (5)
May, 2009 (7)
April, 2009 (7)
March, 2009 (11)
February, 2009 (6)
January, 2009 (9)
December, 2008 (5)
November, 2008 (4)
October, 2008 (7)
September, 2008 (8)
August, 2008 (11)
July, 2008 (11)
June, 2008 (10)
May, 2008 (6)
April, 2008 (8)
March, 2008 (9)
February, 2008 (6)
January, 2008 (6)
December, 2007 (6)
November, 2007 (9)
October, 2007 (7)
September, 2007 (5)
August, 2007 (8)
July, 2007 (6)
June, 2007 (8)
May, 2007 (7)
April, 2007 (9)
March, 2007 (8)
February, 2007 (5)
January, 2007 (9)
December, 2006 (4)
November, 2006 (3)
October, 2006 (4)
September, 2006 (9)
August, 2006 (4)
July, 2006 (9)
June, 2006 (4)
May, 2006 (10)
April, 2006 (4)
March, 2006 (11)
February, 2006 (3)
January, 2006 (13)
December, 2005 (6)
November, 2005 (7)
October, 2005 (4)
September, 2005 (9)
August, 2005 (6)
July, 2005 (7)
June, 2005 (5)
May, 2005 (4)
April, 2005 (7)
March, 2005 (16)
February, 2005 (17)
January, 2005 (17)
December, 2004 (13)
November, 2004 (7)
October, 2004 (14)
September, 2004 (11)
August, 2004 (7)
July, 2004 (3)
June, 2004 (6)
May, 2004 (3)
April, 2004 (2)
March, 2004 (1)
February, 2004 (5)
 Architecture
 Books
 Bxf
 CSLA .NET
 dasBlog
 Distributed OO
 git
 h5js
 JavaScript
 Magenic
 Microsoft .NET
 mono
 MonoDroid
 MonoTouch
 MOslo
 News
 Programming
 Service-Oriented
 Silverlight
 WCF
 Web
 Windows 8
 Windows Azure
 Windows Forms
 Windows Phone
 WinRT
 WomenInTech
 Workflow
 WP7
 WP8
 WPF
 Xbox
 Zune
Blogroll
 Andrew Brust
 AnomalousData
 Brian Noyes
 David Chappell
 Magenic blogs
About

Powered by: newtelligence dasBlog 2.0.7226.0

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

© Copyright 2013, Marimer LLC

Send mail to the author(s) E-mail



Sign In