How robust is the Project Silk architecture for heavy, large data applications?

Project Silk is great for social media applications where there are streams of frequently updated data that should appear in a panel style presentation.

I would like to ask if this architecture is suitable for typical large data applications. We currently use WPF or Silverlight to present a rich client (main / detail form tabs, Office Ribbon styles, drag and drop, grids, charts). Project Silk seems to open up another option for such applications.

A few questions that I have:

  • Are the technologies used in this stack mature enough to be considered in the enterprise?

  • Is the current and upcoming jQuery widget wide enough to meet these needs?

  • Will this architecture work in interpreted mode in the browser, and not fully use the processor power as native applications?

+5
source share
1 answer

Are the technologies used in this stack mature enough to be considered in the enterprise?

jQuery, asp.net mvc 3, html 5, css 3 are mature and work fine for corporate use. There are some differences depending on the browser used. This is a big problem.

Is the current and upcoming jQuery widget wide enough to meet these needs?

. Silverlight/wpf "". UI . Silverlight/wpf "", .

, ?

, , , silverlight/wpf, .

+1

All Articles