Showing results for October 2011 - .NET Blog

Oct 27, 2011
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Update 4.0.2 for the Microsoft .NET Framework 4

Brandon Bray
Brandon Bray

Update (2017): See .NET Framework Releases to learn about newer releases. This release is now unsupported. With .NET 4, we’ve focused on bringing certain features to market through updates without having to wait for the .NET 4.5 release. This post covers what the latest platform update has to offer. Vivek Mishra from the .NET Servicing team authore...

.NET
Oct 27, 2011
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Update 4.0.2 for the Microsoft .NET Framework 4

Brandon Bray
Brandon Bray

Update (2017): See .NET Framework Releases to learn about newer releases. This release is now unsupported. With .NET 4, we’ve focused on bringing certain features to market through updates without having to wait for the .NET 4.5 release. This post covers what the latest platform update has to offer. Vivek Mishra from the .NET Servicing team authore...

.NET
Oct 27, 2011
0
0

Update 4.0.2 for the Microsoft .NET Framework 4

Brandon Bray
Brandon Bray

Update (2017): See .NET Framework Releases to learn about newer releases. This release is now unsupported. With .NET 4, we’ve focused on bringing certain features to market through updates without having to wait for the .NET 4.5 release. This post covers what the latest platform update has to offer. Vivek Mishra from the .NET Servicing team authore...

.NET
Oct 27, 2011
0
0

Update 4.0.2 for the Microsoft .NET Framework 4

Brandon Bray
Brandon Bray

Update (2017): See .NET Framework Releases to learn about newer releases. This release is now unsupported. With .NET 4, we’ve focused on bringing certain features to market through updates without having to wait for the .NET 4.5 release. This post covers what the latest platform update has to offer. Vivek Mishra from the .NET Servicing team authore...

.NET
Oct 3, 2011
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Large Object Heap Improvements in .NET 4.5

Brandon Bray
Brandon Bray

Garbage collection is one of premiere features of the .NET managed coding platform. As the platform has become more capable, we’re seeing developers allocate more and more large objects. Since large objects are managed differently than small objects, we’ve heard a lot of feedback requesting improvement. Today’s post is by Surupa B...

.NET