It's all in the title. Inspired by http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/dx8au/lessons_from_evernotes_flight_from_net/
Edit: I am primarily thinking about desktop apps, not web apps.
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It's all in the title. Inspired by http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/dx8au/lessons_from_evernotes_flight_from_net/ Edit: I am primarily thinking about desktop apps, not web apps. |
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I think you'll hardly find mainstream apps from Microsoft written in .NET, since most of their popular applications were built before .NET was released, re-writing them for .NET provides no benefit for them. But if you look at recent applications you might find .NET based ones:
I know that some are not consumer based, but it shows that recent investments were made on .NET |
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All of Microsoft's websites run ASP.Net. Expression Studio, parts of which target end-users, is built in .Net and has a WPF-based UI. |
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Most of Microsoft Dynamics are written (or have significant porttions written) in .NET |
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Visual Studio's 2010 GUI is written using WPF. The application is not completely managed though. |
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Windows Live Writer is one - at least the last two versions (and IIRC, all versions since it was first released) are ground-up WinForms. |
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