David

Yes. 

I thought that I had read somewhere in the ICT press that Microsoft as a
whole (not just the .NET team/groups) was moving towards more so-called
out-of-band releases. 

For .Net, 4.5.1 came soon after 4.5 - sure, you're not the .NET team but as
I understand it, Silverlight 4 supported some compression formats; .NET 4.5
added compatibility with ZIP compression - appreciated by many; shouldn't
Silverlight add the same capability in a 5.x point-release? 

I see on the Silverlight 'social' forums and on SO, complaints about SL4
applications not being upgradeable to SL5 (they break). 

 

Ian Thomas

Victoria Park, Western Australia

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of David Kean
Sent: Friday, 19 July 2013 9:15 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: RE: Deflate Zip library care

 

Not sure I understand reference to 4.5.1, explain?

 

Are you asking if we can do an out of band release for Zip for Silverlight? 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Ian Thomas
Sent: Thursday, July 18, 2013 3:46 PM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: RE: Deflate Zip library care

 

Time for an out-of-band release? .NET 4.5.1 was one such - you missed that? 

 

 

Ian Thomas

Victoria Park, Western Australia

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of David Kean
Sent: Friday, 19 July 2013 3:33 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: RE: Deflate Zip library care

 

That's my team. J Unfortunately, while we have deflate/gzip
(uncompress-only) support for Silverlight for HTTP responses, we didn't add
ZIP compression support for Silverlight.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Greg Kennedy
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2013 11:37 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Deflate Zip library care

 

Saw this in my twitter feed today, not sure if it's related but it's not too
long to read and may be useful.

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/dotnet/archive/2013/07/17/httpclient-2-2-is-now-stab
le.aspx

In the summary it mentions partial support for Silverlight and a rabbit hole
link if you want to go down it.

Greg

 

On Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 3:51 PM, Greg Keogh <[email protected]> wrote:

Are you sending these files over HTTP? Doesn't HTTP provide the ability to
compress files between server and client?

 

I had a quick look at some pages and docs on this. It seems to be dependent
on the IIS version, having the compression module installed and the client
side being "compression-compatible browsers". I don't know how all this
affects a WCF service and SL client. I'd have to do lots more research to
see if the burden of doing compression could safely and completely moved to
the environment. Id' be interested to hear anyone's experience with this --
Greg

 

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