Filed under: Developer, Internet, Web services, Microsoft
Microsoft Download Center Beta uses Silverlight
Things are changing over at Microsoft Download Center, as the new beta introduces Microsoft's take on Flash, Silverlight. That means if you want to check out the beta for yourself, you'll have to download the Silverlight plug-in in order to actually see the site - which from a usability perspective is never much fun.Then again, people didn't really mind downloading Flash. Nitpicks aside, the website, if you can still call it that ("rich interactive application" anyone?), does look a lot prettier from a cosmetic standpoint than its current counterpart. It is also a lot tidier - the width of the experience has been reduced as well as the feeling of claustrophobia you would get from the regular version has been alleviated. All the text and boxes have proper breathing room now, and are quite easy on the eyes.
It does make one wonder if all of this couldn't have been done with a little bit of CSS instead? Sure you might have to exchange some of the very smooth eyecandy with something slightly more utilitarian - but it could be done. But, of course, Microsoft needs to show off its baby. It's probably safe to assume that once the final version releases that Microsoft will use it as a staging platform to really push Silverlight and try to take a bite out of Flash market share.
Thanks, George!
After spending the better part of an hour on 
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Erik said 9:22AM on 12-30-2007
"It does make one wonder if all of this couldn't have been done with a little bit of CSS instead?"
Are you implying that they actually support CSS? I have no patience for companies that go and make fancy new tech without making sure they have the basics covered.
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Jason said 10:33AM on 12-30-2007
Really... maybe you should lookup Silverlight and see what it does before you bash it and compare it to CSS... I know... I know... Its a Microsoft product and we all know how much you guys at Download Squad hate Microsoft... Really... I haven't read an article hear about something made by Microsoft that hasn't had a negative slant to it.
And instead of writing something like this in this post (you know something useful that might inform people who don't know what silverlight is): "Microsoft® Silverlight™ is a cross-browser, cross-platform plug-in for delivering the next generation of .NET based media experiences and rich interactive applications for the Web. Silverlight offers a flexible programming model that supports AJAX, VB, C#, Python, and Ruby, and integrates with existing Web applications. Silverlight supports fast, cost-effective delivery of high-quality video to all major browsers running on the Mac OS or Windows."
You write... "couldn't this be done with CSS?"
Really... come on... stop with the "We hate Microsoft" stuff around here... please...
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keeves said 1:41PM on 12-30-2007
After viewing the site though, i would have to agree that whilst the site is fairly pretty, it could have been created more or less using existing technology that wouldn't have required all users to download and install Silverlight first. I'm not saying there aren't merits to Microsoft's, but it wasn't that impressive!
Todd Henkel said 12:08PM on 12-30-2007
What is missing on the download page? A complete lack of anything impressive. Not sure why they are pointing out Silverlight is being used on these pages. It wasn't faster, there was nothing interactive and other than the "Loading" in the various lists I would have thought I was looking any other webpage. One of the pages I clicked through to didn't render well in Firefox. The text for the search box was slid way down in the some column headers. Looked like bad CSS...
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michael said 1:11PM on 12-30-2007
Silverlight isn't that hard to download. It's pretty fast. Downloaded it in just a few seconds on my computer. Not that hard.
The site does look nicer, but wished the dropped the large ad near the bottom. Something makes it feel incomplete though. Like the site doesn't utilize the whole space, and blank spaces makes it feel undone.
Pretty interesting though. Better than the old one.
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