My own quick summary...
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/fsharpteam/archive/2011/09/14/f-3-0-developer-preview-now-available.aspx
gives an overview of information-rich programming with type provider and queries.
The What's New document on MSDN gives a quick overview of new features.
Type Providers (connecting to external rich data sources) and queries (support for query operators, LINQ, nullables) all hang together very strongly and obviously. Adding SI units to the library ensures a single definition, so that e.g. two third-party libraries don't each define their own 'meter' type which are then nominally-incompatible types (a number of external data sources from scientific domains have units-of-measure information). So these language features are all very much a part of the thrust of the release for information-rich programming.
I think the only other language features are auto-properties (see here with 'member val'; this was a highly-requested feature, and was tiny and easy-to-implement) and triple-quoted-strings (which I can't find in the docs right now, I'll file a doc bug).
The IDE features so far have focused on improving IntelliSense and Parameter Help, which once again tie into the Information Rich programming theme, where these IDE features are a key part of the type provider experience.
member val Foo = foo
is no shorter thanmember x.Foo = foo
. Maybe optimizations can be applied since there's nothis
reference in scope??foo
has a side-effect. In any case, yes, the get/set case is 'more valuable' than the get-only case, but the syntax is uniform/orthogonal here.