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Press Releases submitted from various .NET companies.

Programming Atlas - O'Reilly's Latest Release

For Immediate Release

For more information, a review copy, cover art, or an interview with the author, contact:

Kathryn Barrett (707) 827-7094 or kathrynb@oreilly.com

Building Ajax-Style Applications with ASP.NET Atlas O'Reilly Releases "Programming Atlas"

Sebastopol, CA--"If various weblogs and online and print commentaries are to be believed, Ajax is the future of web development, the enabler of Web 2.0, and probably a cure for fatal diseases as well," muses author and JavaScript expert Christian Wenz. And certainly, it does seem that Ajax is the answer for web developers who want to provide their users with a much richer client experience but don't want to (or, for practical reasons,

cannot) write a Windows client application. It lets web applications behave almost like desktop applications, with features such as keyboard shortcuts and drag and drop.

Not to be left behind, Microsoft has announced its own framework that provides Ajax functionality, but with added controls and features that make the development of modern web applications even easier. Called "ASP.NET Atlas" (or just "Atlas," for short) this set of technologies offers .NET developers many of the same benefits for Ajax technologies that ASP.NET provides for server side development. In his new book, "Programming Atlas" (O'Reilly, US $34.99), Christian Wenz shows readers how to use this new framework to build Ajax-savvy websites.

"Atlas is quite mature now," says Wenz. "A go-live license exists and the user community is growing. Ajax is becoming more and more important, and Atlas can help a lot along the way, providing convenient and common functionality and thereby facilitating and speeding up the Ajax development process--just like ASP.NET 2.0 does for web development."

Not just a drag-and-drop ASP.NET 2.0 book, "Programming Atlas" dives into the technologies that make Ajax work. The book begins with a tour of the technologies most often associated with Ajax. Once readers have mastered the fundamentals, Wenz unpacks the Atlas framework and shows them how to put its tools to work. They'll learn how to:

-Understand the architecture of Atlas and the role played by server controls, such as ScriptManager and UpdatePanel -Build more interactive pages using controls and extenders to autocomplete text fields, validate user input, drag and drop controls, and much more -Bind, display, and update data without causing the entire page to refresh, and use the Atlas web services bridge to consume third-party services beyond the domain of the application -Incorporate Microsoft Virtual Earth into an application, use Atlas with Web Parts, and create a Windows Live Gadget -Use Atlas with PHP and explore other non-Microsoft Ajax tools for ASP.NET

Wenz says that his book "does not focus on 'fancy' examples but has a didactical focus, showing every important aspect of Atlas." The book is up to date, includes coverage of the Atlas Control Toolkit (to which Wenz contributed), and provides Ajax and JavaScript basics as well. "I'm a big believer in the 'show, don't tell' principle," says Wenz. "Therefor the book contains a large number of examples showing the key aspects of the Atlas framework. I'm also a fan of focusing on relevant facts, so I've created small examples, each conveying one or two points. In my experience as an authora dn trainer, shorter examples produce better results and make learning easier."

Praise for "Programming Atlas":

"The definitive work on a compelling new platform. Wenz does for Atlas what Grisham does for courtrooms. Superb!"

-- Jeff Prosise, Wintellect

"...provides a comprehensive, in-depth look at Atlas, and give you everything you need to know to build rich web applications, gadgets, and components with Atlas."

-- Shanku Niyogi, Product Unit Manager, UI Framework and Services Team, Microsoft

Additional Resources:

For more information about the book, including table of contents, index, author bio, and samples, see:

http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/atlas/

For a cover graphic in JPEG format, go to:

http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/atlas/cover.html

Programming Atlas

Christian Wenz

ISBN: 0-596-52672-5, 382 pages, $34.99 US, $45.99 CA order@oreilly.com

1-800-998-9938

1-707-827-7000

http://www.oreilly.com

1005 Gravenstein Highway North

Sebastopol, CA 95472

About O'Reilly

O'Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, and conferences. Since 1978, O'Reilly has been a chronicler and catalyst of leading-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by amplifying "faint signals" from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism.

# # #

O'Reilly is a registered trademark of O'Reilly Media, Inc. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.

 

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Published Tuesday, October 03, 2006 3:34 PM by ssmith

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About ssmith

Enlisted in 1995. Basic at Ft Sill. AIT at Ft Jackson (75F). Served in Ohio National Guard. Went through ROTC program at Ohio State University and received 2LT commission in 1997, Engineer branch. Spent about 4 years in 16th Engineer Brigade in Ohio National Guard, then moved far from nearest unit and went into Inactive National Guard, and eventually Individual Ready Reserve. Called up from IRR in 2004 for duty in Iraq (Engineer Platoon Leader with 1st ID). Made it home in 2005. Resigned commission as a CPT in December 2005.