"Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Over the last year we’ve been working hard on “Atlas”. It has evolved, changed, and grown because of the amazing amount of feedback and early adoption that we’ve seen. We’ve had an unbelievable amount of interest and excitement around the product, with more than 250,000 downloads this year alone.

Shipping “Atlas” 1.0

Many people have asked us to deliver a fully-supported 1.0 release of “Atlas” before the next release of Visual Studio. “Fully supported” means that Microsoft product support services are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year and that any customer can obtain hotfixes if they encounter a bug affecting their application. It also means that the product has a committed servicing product lifetime of 10 years – which provides companies with the ability to depend on it for mission critical applications.

I am excited to announce today that we are going to ship this fully supported “Atlas” 1.0 release on top of ASP.NET 2.0 and ensure that it works with Visual Studio 2005. Our goal is to ship the “Atlas” 1.0 release around the end of this year. The plan is to first have a Beta, then an RC, and then decide on the final date based on customer feedback.

“Atlas” Feature Delivery Plan

To help expedite the schedule and get out a fully supported release this year, we are going to focus on delivering a “core” set of fully supported functionality.  This core set of functionality includes all the common components needed to enable developers to build client-side controls/components, as well as the server-side functionality that provides integration within ASP.NET (including the super-popular update-panel and other server controls).

There are features of the current “Atlas” CTP drops that won’t be in the fully supported “core” bucket. These features will continue to be available in a separate download and will continue to work on top of the supported “core” release. We aren’t pulling back from these features at all.  We are simply trying to optimize the timing of the first fully supported set of features and also make sure that we have the flexibility to continue to evolve and innovate some features in a more agile fashion (whereas we are trying to “bake down” the core set of features and avoid having it change dramatically in the future).

We will obviously continue to support a Go-Live license for all features going forward. Enterprise customers who only want to use products backed by a full support agreement can optionally choose to only use those features in the “core” release.

Over time we will be moving more and more features into the fully supported bucket. We will also be publishing a detailed white paper listing features, release plans, and product changes from the CTPs to help with planning over the next few weeks.

“Atlas” Naming

As part of releasing “Atlas”, we have also finally locked on an official set of product names that we will begin using moving forward. What was formerly called “Atlas” will now have a few names:

1) The client-side “Atlas” javascript library is going to be called the Microsoft AJAX Library. This will work with any browser, and also support any backend web server (read these blog posts to see how to run it on PHP and ColdFusion).

2) The server-side “Atlas” functionality that nicely integrates with ASP.NET will be called the ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions. As part of this change the tag prefix for the “Atlas” controls will change from <atlas:>to <asp:>. These controls will also be built-in to ASP.NET vNext.

3) The “Atlas” Control Toolkit today is a set of free, shared source controls and components that help you get the most value from the ASP.NET AJAX Extensions. Going forward, the name of the project will change to be the ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit.

In closing

We are really excited about being able to get a fully supported 1.0 release out. It will be 100% cross-browser and cross-platform. It will simplify adding rich AJAX functionality to ASP.NET applications, and it will enable hugely improved UX for end users. Getting this functionality into your hands in the most flexible way possible is our number one priority and we think the plan I outline above does just that.

Things will get even better next year with Visual Studio “Orcas” where we are adding rich JavaScript intellisense, debugging and WYSIWYG designer support for the ASP.NET AJAX Extensions within Visual Studio and many other great features to take advantage of.

Thanks,

Scott

Published Monday, September 11, 2006 10:01 AM by ScottGu

Comments

# “Atlas” naming and roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:03 PM by Brian Goldfarb's Blog

Over the last year I’ve been fortunate to be deeply involved in our “Atlas” project to bring rich AJAX...

# &amp;quot;Atlas&amp;quot; Gets a new Name

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:24 PM by Craig Shoemaker

Scott Guthrie just broke the news that the "Atlas" framework is the recipient of not just one new name,...

# Atlas Naming Game

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:28 PM by Steven Smith

Ok, Microsoft &quot;Atlas&quot; is now less than six months away, assuming it ships on schedule or with

# Microsoft Shrugs Off Atlas Name

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:31 PM by Steven Smith

Scott Guthrie today announced that the &quot;Atlas&quot; code name for the ASP.NET team&#39;s rich client

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:32 PM by Plip

I'm going to keep calling it Atlas (for a while anyway), it's much cooler ;-)

# Nome oficial do Atlas revelado

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:36 PM by Oneda

Acabou de ser revelado o nome oficial que o Atlas terá. Na verdade, serão vários nomes, de acordo com...

# From Atlas to the ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:39 PM by Brad Abrams

As you saw from ScottGu’s blog, we gave Atlas an official name and, in response to strong customer feedback,...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:42 PM by Jim Minatel
Fantasic choice on Microsoft's part to make this a "fully supported" release. You guys are out front on Ajax for developers and know how to treat your developers right.

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:49 PM by Eric Wise
Now the question is, with achieving 100% browser compat... how badly do you hate safari? *chuckle*

# [Atlas] Microsoft Ajax Library

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:49 PM by ASP.NET Deutsch Blogs

Nun, das wichtigste in Kürze - Das Microsoft Framework Codename "Atlas" wird noch in diesem Jahr in der

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:50 PM by Alan Le
I really like the name Microsoft AJAX Library. However, I think “ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions” is a mouth full to say. Any recommendation for a short name? Also, will the official site still be http://atlas.asp.net/?

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:51 PM by Laurence Moroney
Great news! This is production ready sooner than I expected, but then again just about everything has been a pleasant surprise with Atlas. Laurence (Author of 'Foundations of Atlas', Apress)

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:55 PM by ScottGu

Hi Eric,

One of the big things we've been working on this summer is doing some major rearchitecting/refactoring of the Javascript libraries.

One of the specific reasons for this is to ensure great Safari support.  With these changes all of the features in the "core" supported 1.0 release will fully support Safari.

One other thing we focused on was minimizing the download size of the javascript.  With the most recent builds we've got the total Atlas javascript library download size down to about 6k total (and obviously this is then cached on the client).  This includes all of the support needed to enable the type-system, the client control framework, and everything needed to enable the UpdatePanel and associated ASP.NET server controls.

Hope this helps,

Scott

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 1:56 PM by ScottGu

Hi alan,

ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions is indeed a bit of a mouthful. Overtime all of this will just be built-in to the core ASP.NET setup.  So I suspect a lot of people will just use "ASP.NET" to describe it all.  

Hope this helps,

Scott

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:08 PM by kevind

Scott,

Thanks for the update. News has been scarce on the Atlas front lately - I hope now things will start kicking into gear again.

Any news on when we might be seeing the fruits of this major refactoring?

Also, any word on Opera support in the framework? In my opinion, this is the biggest weakness of Atlas, especially compared to virtually every other Ajax framework out there.

#

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:09 PM by DotNetKicks.com

You've been kicked (a good thing) - Trackback from DotNetKicks.com

# Atlas 1.0 Naming and Roadmap Announced

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:09 PM by Keyvan Nayyeri

Scott Guthrie announced the Naming and Roadmap of Microsoft technology for building rich web clients,

# Atlas 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:14 PM by Keyvan Nayyeri

Scott Guthrie announced the Naming and Roadmap of Microsoft technology for building rich web clients,

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:30 PM by Martin
Mmmmm...unable to register..busy ?

# &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Official Naming and Release Plan

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:36 PM by Keith Smith's Blog

Scott Guthrie, General Manager of .NET Development Platform,today announced the "Atlas" v1.0 official...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:37 PM by Tor Langlo
Scott, I've been using Atlas since PDC'05 and have developed a kind relationship with it :-). I take my hat off to all who have been involved with creating the product. The word 'Atlas' has 2 syllables, 'ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions' has 12 syllable’s. I wonder if Microsoft is doing itself a disfavor by doing all these renames late in the development cycle (I'm also thinking of the WPF/WCF/WWF vs. Avalon/Indigo, and the Expression family vs. Quarts/Acrylic/??? games). Are there really more pros than cons that defend the name changes? Who is the target audience that will benefit from it (I'm not sure how I will benefit)? The word 'Atlas' is very easy to pronounce, visually recognize, and it's particularly useful when searching help, internet, and blogs (e.g. "Atlas UpdatePanel" or "Atlas cascading dropdown"). This last part also implies that 'Atlas' is easy to use for those who contribute searchable content (i.e. people like Scott Guthrie :-)). A quick search reveals that you (Scott) have over 50 articles with the word 'Atlas' in the header. Anyway, I guess it's not a big deal, but sometimes you wonder if these renames really are beneficial. It certainly has caught my attention... Tor.

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 2:59 PM by Sergio Pereira
In the end the name was surprisingly acceptable IMHO. I was hoping it didn't get named in the lines Foundation or Framework. I think ASP.NET developers will refer to it as "the AJAX extensions" or "the AJAX library" interchangeably because all three modules are likely to be used together in a large part of the applications. Looking forward to 1.0 !

# Atlas 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:00 PM by Christian Nagel's OneNotes

Scott Guthrie has the informationasked by all Atlasdevelopers: Shipping date: Atlas 1.0...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:03 PM by Mads
Why not keep the Atlas name? If its going to be a part of ASP.NET anyways, why bother?

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:05 PM by Albert Pascual
Well, this answers all my questions http://alpascual.com/blog/al/archive/2006/09/09/Is-Atlas-not-ready-yet_3F00_-How-long-it-takes-for-an-Ajax-library_2100_.aspx

# And the real name of Atlas will be...

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:11 PM by Atlas and more

Scott just announced the naming and roadmap for Atlas going forward:http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2006/09/11/_2200_Atlas_2200_-1.0-Naming-and-Roadmap.asp

# Atlas Has a Name and a Release Schedule

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:13 PM by Tim Weaver

Scott Guthrie has posted that Atlas now has an official name: Microsoft AJAX Library and is scheduled...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:14 PM by David Taylor
Hi Scott, Great decision. Like any renaming attempt, you will get many people objecting to the change and stating that Atlas was cooler (it probably was). But the point is that anyone who hears the new name will instantly know what the technology does without any further explanation. This is a good decision. Regards, David

# a clean AJAX roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:17 PM by Emerging Thoughts with Nav Bhachech

Many startups use AJAX- it is the hot technique to make an interactive application out of otherwisestatic...

# &amp;quot;Atlas&amp;quot; as been named

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:25 PM by Canadian Developers

Head over to Scott Guthrie's blog for the details of the new name as well as a roadmap to availability...

# &quot;Atlas&quot; Naming and Release Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:33 PM by .net DEvHammer

Scott Guthrie posts a roadmap of the updated naming and release dates for the technologies currently...

# Microsoft AJAX Library

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:34 PM by guidmaster´s .NET blog

Så er den gal igen. Vi har fået endnu et nyt navn vi skal til at vende Os til: Microsoft AJAX Library

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:37 PM by Mark Hildreth
This is great news. Things have been pretty quiet for Atlas over past few months with only 2 bug fix releases. Any chance we'll see a September CTP?

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:37 PM by Alex Osipov
Hi Scott, My feeling is that the name Microsoft AJAX Library is completely wrong for the client side library. Many of us have developed a lot around the client side library and all the features of the library can hardly be described by "ajax" (hey, UpdatePanel wasn't always what it is today). The name itself makes it seems that Microsoft is dying to get on the ajax bandwagon all the while it has been at the forefront. Ignoring all and sticking to the facts AJAX is the wrong name since Atlas uses JSON rather than XML =) Just my 2 cents. Good luck with the product release, you guys are doing a great job.

# &amp;quot;Atlas&amp;quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:43 PM by Federal Developer Weblog

Hot off the presses! Scott Guthrie has announced the new names for the ASP.NET "Atlas" technologies....

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 3:58 PM by Martin Bennedik
Hi Scott, this is fantastic news. How does this relate to Service Pack 1 for Visual Studio 2005?

# Nombre final para Atlas Framework

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:09 PM by Ivan Mostacero v2.0™

Scott Gu ha publicado unpost denominado "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmapen donde explica los nombres finales

# Microsoft AJAX and the roadmap!

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:12 PM by David Boschmans Weblog

After the naming game for ASP.NET "Atlas" that was started a couple of weeks ago by Steven Smith, todaythe...

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:25 PM by ScottGu

Hi Mark/Kevin,

The team has actually been working on a 1.0 fork of the code for the last few months, which is why the two most recent CTP drops only had a few critical bug fixes in them (the major work in the 1.0 branch).

As I mentioned above, broader browser support is one reason for some of the architectural changes we've made.  As we've been working on improved tool features we've also made some changes to add better Javascript intellisense and debugging support.  We've also done a ton of performance tuning and footprint size reduction.

All of these changes should show up in the next CTP.  We don't have a final ETA for this CTP -- since we are still finalizing some of the pieces.

Hope this helps,

Scott

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:32 PM by kevind

>As I mentioned above, broader browser

Ah, interesting, I didn't pick that up. I guess I read "cross-browser" as "cross browser, for the browsers we choose to support". :)

That's really excellent news. I'm excited to get a peek at the new bits.

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:40 PM by MaD
When the Atlas begin to run on Opera browser?

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:40 PM by Larry Foulkrod
What is a UX? Is that a AJAX powered user interface?

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:44 PM by ScottGu

Hi Martin,

We are going to ship 1.0 independent of VS 2005 SP1 (it will work regardless of whether you have it installed or not).

The "Atlas" 1.0 binaries don't actually affect VS at all -- since they are framework binaries as opposed to design-time binaries.

Hope this helps,

Scott

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:45 PM by ScottGu

Hi Larry,

Good question -- "UX" actually is shorthand for "user experience".  I should have probably called it out instead.

Hope this helps,

Scott

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:48 PM by foobar
Shucks, I'm going to miss the Atlas name. I'm very pleased with the release decisions. Many of us will be very satisfied with just the core functionality (which is a lot of functionality) being supported.

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:51 PM by ScottGu

Hi MaD,

We are looking at Opera support right now.  What we've said is that all "Atlas" features in the 1.0 release will work with FireFox, IE and Safari.  Our hope is to make the same statement about Opera - but at this point we haven't finalized that yet.

What we do know is that many features will work on Opera (again - the goal is to be able to say all do, but we haven't fully tested yet).  In the event that we find a feature that doesn't fully work on Opera, we will clearly document those scenarios so people can optionally work around them, or degrade

gracefully.

Hope this helps,

Scott

P.S. This is consistent with most other AJAX frameworks, most of which also sometimes have some issues with certain features working in Opera.

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:53 PM by ScottGu

Hi Foobar,

You can still affectionally call it "Atlas" and people will know what you mean. :-)

Thanks,

Scott

# A really good resource on ASP.net and ATLAS 1.0

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:54 PM by Visual Studio Blog

I have been away from this blog for a while, but I will start to pull together a series of resources

# Roadmap et nommage de &quot;ATLAS&quot;, le framework AJAX de Microsoft

Monday, September 11, 2006 4:57 PM by Christophe Lauer, Blog Edition

Scott Guthrie vient de rendre publiques sur son blog un certain nombre d'informations très intéressantes...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:08 PM by Daniel Goldman
It's nice to see the Atlas tem keeping the Opera browser in mind.

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:13 PM by Sean
Why not Microsoft AJAX Library for ASP.NET 2005? *Rolls eyes* http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEmZuieb7TM Has anything changed? Will it ever? It's boggling to me that MS gets alot of recognition from codenames... then they throw all that recognition away. Was there anything preventing 'Atlas' from being the actual name? Product naming does not have to functionally describe the product. (Kudos to the Vista name.)

# &amp;quot;Atlas&amp;quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:14 PM by while(availableTime>0) {

At last we can all unite in celebration!!! Microsoft is supporting "Atlas" and now it will be named...

# &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:27 PM by It's Way Too Early For This

Over the last year we’ve been working hard on “Atlas”. It has evolved, changed, and grown because of

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:33 PM by Mike
Great. Looking forward to it. You know, I was actually waiting for something like this to be announced before I would even look at Atlas, makes it a bit more 'official'. It's not gonna be in Visual Studio 2005 Service Pack 1 though, right?

# ¡Atlas ya tiene nombre final!

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:36 PM by .NET un mundo por descubrir

Hoy nos contaba Scott Guthrie en su blog cual será el nombre definitivo de Atlas en un post titulado

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:40 PM by Eugenio Estrada Csaky
Congratulations, that's a new passage towards a final Release. I will hope with anxiety that day.

# Atlas to Ship Earlier than Expected

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:43 PM by Rob Windsor's Weblog

Scott Guthrie announces that version 1.0 of ASP.NET &quot;Atlas&quot; will ship &quot;around the end

# &amp;quot;Atlas&amp;quot; Changes

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:48 PM by Mike Taulty's Blog

ScottGu has a posting on "Atlas" changes.

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:56 PM by Gabriel Lozano-Mor&#225;n
Will it be part of .NET Framework 3.4.7 (sorry lost count)? If not how would you otherwise position these AJAX frameworks in the .NET Framework? I mean that I find it kind of strange that stuff like WCS and WF make the .NET Framework but these AJAX libraries not?

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 5:58 PM by Manuel Abadia
Scott, can you tell us if this announcement has any implications on nikhil's script#?

# Nom final d'Atlas : ASP.net 2.0 Ajax extensions

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:01 PM by Cyril 's Blog

Il y a quelques temps je vous avez parlé que Microsoft était en train de chercher un nom pour le projet...

# &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:25 PM by Nanda Lella's WebLog

In , ScottGu's Bloghe has just posted the datails realated to Atlas naming and release roadmap.A...

# ATLAS renamed to ASP.NET AJAX Extensions

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:25 PM by Granville Barnett

For more details see Scott Guthries&#39; post here .

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:26 PM by ScottGu

Hi Gabriel,

.NET Framework 3.0 ships before the "Atlas" 1.0 release, otherwise it would be included within that.

The next release of the .NET Framework will, though, include all of the functionality within the "Atlas" 1.0 release.  

In general, we are trying to use separate small releases like "Atlas" that work on existing versions of the framework to be able to get features into developers hands quickly (without them having to wait for the next full major framework release to ship).  We will then roll up these features into the bigger framework release the next time time it ships.

This model hopefully provides both agility and immediate developer value, as well as the overall simplicity of one unified framework install that ships on a regular release schedule.

Hope this helps,

Scott

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:27 PM by ScottGu

Hi Manuel,

You'll definitely be able to use Script# to target the 1.0 release.  It will continue to be a great way to build apps using it.

Hope this helps,

Scott

# Ajax, Ajax, Ajax

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:28 PM by Matt Powell

Scott announced today the future of our Ajax product plans. The stuff that has been code named...

# Atlas改め ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:31 PM by OPC Diary

名前が変わることになっていた"Atlas"の名称が正式に決まったらしい。 クライ...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 6:47 PM by Geoffrey
We have been utilizing Atlas for internal apps in production and so far our internal users (Customer Service and Warehousing) are loving it. We were hoping to launch some consumer products using the tookit, really soon. What is the migration path going to looklike? I dont want to realease to production for consumers if we are going to have to make major changes. geoffrey

# re: "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 7:14 PM by Jon Galloway

You passed on an opportunity to expand the "Microsoft Windows Live" and "Windows ____ Foundation" brands? Well done, sir!

These specific names pretty much crush my hopes[1] that you'd sneak SubSonic in the mix, though. Any possibility of somehow sponsoring, endorsing, or co-opting SubSonic in some way?

[1] http://weblogs.asp.net/jgalloway/archive/2006/08/30/SubSonic-_2800_formerly-ASP.NET-ActionPack_2900_-_2D00_-Microsoft-should-ship-this-with-Atlas.aspx

# Microsoft readies renamed Ajax tooling

Monday, September 11, 2006 8:23 PM by Microsoft News Tracker

Microsoft has been working on their “Atlas” technology for AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript And XML) Web applications so popular in the Web 2.0 world and Microsoft’s Scott Guthrie has the latest: ...

# &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 9:50 PM by ナオキにASP.NET(仮)

ScottGu's Blogと Hiroyasu Kitagawa's Blogからです。 "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap Altasの名前および重要な情報...

# Atlas Reloaded !!

Monday, September 11, 2006 10:26 PM by Sunny Nagi

Keith Smith during his presentation at Teched 2006 mentioned that Atlas will be given a proper name within

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 10:43 PM by Diego
News at 7: The fears were founded today when Microsoft took a perfectly good product name, gave it to marketing, and came up with a very lame replacement. Typical Microsoft.

# Microsoft AJAX Library

Monday, September 11, 2006 11:36 PM by .NET a 2.860 m de altura

En esta otra entrada contaba yo que aunque hallo a Ajax muy interesante, revolucionario, revolucionario

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Monday, September 11, 2006 11:53 PM by Steve
It will always be 'atlas' to me :)

# [Ajax]Atlas から AJAX へ

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:27 AM by おがわみつぎの SQL Server な BLOG

[Ajax]Atlas から AJAX へ

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:30 AM by Manzi
I agree that this is groundbreaking. This has It has created an unbelievable hype among the developer communities world-wide. Awesome!

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:45 AM by vikram
Great news . I have alrady used ATLAS frame work in 3 of my projects. The support of Visual Studion would be great

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:51 AM by Shawn Oster
Do all the developers just die a little more inside everytime the naming police get done beating the ever living passion and life out any semi-cool sounding project name? Seriously, you guys do some awesome work but your ability to name anything *sucks*. Please for the love of humanity do NOT even attempt to name your children without outside help.

# Atlas Becomes Product

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:59 AM by Paul Litwin's Blog

In his well-read blog, Scott Guthrie today announces the renaming of Atlas , Microsoft&#39;s AJAX toolkit.

# &quot;Atlas&quot; cambia nome

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 3:35 AM by Blog di Vito Arconzo

Con l'avvicinarsi della release finale, ecco che spunta fuori il nuovo nome di Atlas : 1) The client-side

# In Case You're Late To The Party....

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 3:36 AM by Dan Wahlin's WebLog

This is one of the most blogged about topics of the day, but in case you haven&#39;t heard (I understand

# Shipping &amp;ldquo;Atlas&amp;rdquo; 1.0

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 4:07 AM by <dw:daniel_walzenbach runat="server" />

"Many people have asked us to deliver a fully-supported 1.0 release of “Atlas” before the next release...

# Microsoft AJAX Library, ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions y Control Toolkit

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 4:31 AM by Fouz Blog

La versi&oacute;n final de Atlas est&eacute; disponible a finales de este a&ntilde;o, despu&eacute;s

# Calling Cork: User group reminder - talk on &quot;Atlas&quot; and ASP.NET security tonight

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 5:03 AM by Clare Dillon's Blog

If you are in the Cork area, you should make sure to head along to the Imperial Hotel at 7pm tonight...

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 5:21 AM by Dean Edwards
> It will be 100% cross-browser and cross-platform. Yeah right.

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 5:43 AM by David
Hi Scott, Thanks for the info. With regard to the server controls, if the tag prefix is changing from atlas to asp and with the plans to integrate the controls into the next version asp.net, will we see the controls move from the Microsoft.Web.UI.Controls namespace to System.Web...? David

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 5:44 AM by Jean Charles VIEAU
Nice to have an official supported release. What about Atlas 1.0 integration in SharePoint (WSS 2007 for example) ?

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 5:56 AM by Stefan
This is perfect new! It is earlier that I expected to get the "released version". Thanks for the update.

# "Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 6:19 AM by Atlas notes

It&#39;s all in this blog entry by Scott Guthrie . Also, Atlas has now an official name: Microsoft AJAX

# Should I wait for Orcas?

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 6:30 AM by help.net

Like many web developers I am excited by the news about Atlas and the full commitment by Microsoft to

# Re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 7:52 AM by erik.zetterstrom@dotway.se (Erik Zetterstr&#246;m)
Great naming couldn’t be straighter forward and so précis.

# 微软最新披露Atlas的发布计划和正式名称

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 7:56 AM by SilentAcorn的随笔

Atlas的正式名称包括三部分,原来的客户端Atlas Javascript Library将会采用Microsoft AJAX Library,这是个跨平台跨浏览器的客户端Javascript库;原先的Atlas Server side library将会采用ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Extensions,而原来的前缀也将改成,以凸显跟ASP.NET更紧密集成;原来的Atlas Control Toolkit则会更名为ASP.NET 2.0 AJAX Control Toolkit。

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 7:59 AM by Weterings
Yes, nice to see official support for Atlas. I'm impatient for Orcas to arrive :-)

# re: &quot;Atlas&quot; 1.0 Naming and Roadmap

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 8:03 AM by Gill Cleeren
I really love the fact that it will be final as soon as this year. While go-live licenses exist, few clients are willing to adopt new technologies while still in beta. That will change now :)

# Microsoft Atlas official naming

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 8:51 AM by Microsoft Daily News

Scott Guthrie today announced that the "Atlas" code name for the ASP.NET team's rich client framework

# Atlas Core

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 10:03 AM by Paul Mooney

"Atlas" 1.0 Naming and Roadmap Atlas 1.0 will ship, but it will not include some compatible features...

# The framework formerly known as Atlas

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 10:31 AM by Tony Lombardo

It's now the middle of September, and the end of the year is quickly approaching. We have all watched...

# Atlas gets a new name!

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 11:03 AM by Blake

&quot;As part of releasing &ldquo;Atlas&rdquo;, we have also finally locked on an official set of product

# What's In a Name? Part 2 - &amp;quot;Atlas&amp;quot; Revealed!

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:05 PM by JrzyShr Dev Guy

Three weeks ago, I posted about how the game was on to figure out what the "real" name of the Atlas framework...

# Scott Guthrie Posts Atlas Delivery Details

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 12:40 PM by ScottD's Musings

For anyone who might have missed it...Yesterday, Scott Guthrie unveiled the details for Atlas v1.0. I&#39;m

# On the naming of products, part II

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 1:22 PM by mike's blog