What is Microsoft Silverlight and How does it Work?

  Tiffany Griffin    October 4, 2011    1356

 

With Microsoft’s avid push to make Silverlight a better rival to Flash and HTML 5, Microsoft partnered with Aptia Systems, a custom software development company. Microsoft is serious about customer satisfaction and usability, which is why it also recently promised to develop better web based software applications. Silverlight currently supports “3D” graphics and a new and it also offers a greatly improved media player. While Silverlight is not new technology, it is a technology that people do not hear much about in the news. This is because Microsoft keeps it concealed for the most part. As such, many users are not familiar with what it is, only that they need to install the plug-in on their browser to be able to surf the Internet. What is Silverlight? 

What is Silverlight? 

Silverlight is a Microsoft made feature-rich plug-in, much like Adobe and their Flash plug-ins. It allows Microsoft developers to create and deploy applications and other Web 2.0 related content for use while surfing online or for use on the desktop while working offline. Silverlight is a Microsoft .NET plug-in, which is free to all users. Anyone can download the plug in for his or her Firefox and/or Internet Explorer browsers.   

Compatibility & System Requirements 

Microsoft’s Silverlight platform is it is a cross-compatible developing platform. What this means is that Silverlight it is compatible with almost any computer system and almost any browser available for download and use. Silverlight is also Linux, Moonlight, Mac and Windows Compatible. The system requirements for using Silverlight vary depending on the computer used. Silverlight runs on Windows, Mac and Linux systems; however, for Linux you must download Moonlight, which is an open source version of Silverlight, direct from the Mono website. Mono is the creator of the open source version of Silverlight for Linux. The Linux version of Silverlight is compatible with any 32-bit or 64-bit computer using at least 128 MB of RAM.    

Windows requires that a computer use no operating system that is older than Windows XP with Service Pack 2 (SP2), which will change this October when Microsoft stops supporting XP. Silverlight will run on any version of Windows Vista and Windows 7. 

For a Mac computer, Silverlight requires at least the Mac OS X version 10.4.8 or newer. It also must use an Intel Core Dup 1.83 GHz processor, or its equivalent and at least 128 MB of RAM for Silverlight to run properly. While Microsoft has made some massive mobile blunders recently, computers and operating systems are areas it knows well.   

This article is for informational purposes and is the opinion of the author which may not be the opinion of the site that this article links to. 

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