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  • 0 comments  /  posted by  Silverlight Show  on  Jun 11, 2010 (1 week ago)
    Tim Heuer is discussing the issue of hosting Silverlight applications (XAPs) on your site that are from a different domain.

    What I mean here is that your site (www.coolwebapp.com) has an <object> tag for Silverlight plugin that has the Source parameter set to apps.anothersite.com/foo.xap.  This is essentially the cross-domain hosting situation.  What happens in this situation is that the plugin loads but the app does not, presenting in just a big blank space where the app should be.

    A recent head-banger sent me a note and I sent him my items to check on how to solve this.  I thought I’d share.



  • Silverlight Hosting in WPF

    0 comments  /  posted by  Ivan Dragoev  on  Jan 04, 2010 (5 months ago)
    Tags: Hosting , WPF

    In this blog post David Kelley talks about a WPF panel that hosts Silverlight.

    Ok so we know this has been done. Yawn, and it can be done any number of ways from hacking it in a browser control but actually doing it in WPF without the browser control can be a huge pain. Here is a little trick that helps you do just that without all the jumping around.

  • 1 comments  /  posted by  Silverlight Show  on  Dec 23, 2009 (6 months ago)
    Jeff Prosise demonstrates how easy it is to host HTML content inside a Silverlight control.

    This support isn't limited to static HTML content; the content can be interactive and can include script. It can even be Flash content or content that includes other Silverlight controls. To host HTML content in Silverlight, you can use either a WebBrowser control or an HtmlBrush.

  • 1 comments  /  posted by  Silverlight Show  on  Nov 02, 2009 (7 months ago)

    Tim Greenfield shows how to host your .xap files on Amazon S3.

    Silverlight apps are nothing more than big zip files and Amazon S3 is dirt cheap and hyper-scalable. Why would you ever host your Silverlight .xap files on your own server or ISP? … especially with Silverlight Streaming being dropped soon.

    Here’s a quick guide to putting your Silverlight apps on Amazon S3 and depending on your app, never worry about scalability or bandwidth costs again…


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