Use ClickOnce to Deploy Windows Applications
by Wei-Meng Lee04/06/2006
Deployment is a key to success for your software product--if you can't deliver your application, you're sunk. Use ClickOnce to Deploy Windows Applications, a new PDF from O'Reilly, shows you how to use ClickOnce, a new technology in Visual Studio 2005, to quickly get your Windows application into the hands of your customers.
This step-by-step guide covers:
How to install, run, update, and unistall a Windows application via ClickOnce
How to take advantage of ClickOnce installation configurations
How to use Code Access Security for permissions, as well as signing tips
How to avoid the problems of DLL conficts
There's also an appendix that covers how to create a Windows application for ClickOnce using Visual Studio 2005.
Deploying your Windows apps is just a click away. Buy this PDF today for just $7.99.
Wei-Meng Lee (Microsoft MVP) http://weimenglee.blogspot.com is a technologist and founder of Developer Learning Solutions http://www.developerlearningsolutions.com, a technology company specializing in hands-on training on the latest Microsoft technologies.
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Showing messages 1 through 5 of 5.
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This isn't an article, it is an advertisement
2006-04-08 15:21:26 Joe [View]
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This isn't an article, it is an advertisement
2006-04-13 06:46:37 kesfan [View]
I agree with the first poster, this article has no useful content.
I subscribe to this feed for the articles. I don't mind adverts around the articles, or references to related O'Reilly books in the articles but this kind of item is just pure spam.
If you want to advertise your PDF book, why not write a good, useful introductory article about ClickOnce and then refer to your book for more information? That's the approach other articles take and I think that's perfectly fine and useful. Why break a good model from which everyone benefits? -
This isn't an article, it is an advertisement
2006-04-13 07:03:24 Wei-Meng Lee |
[View]
OK, I have been looking at this thread of discussions and at the risk of offending some people, I felt inclined to say something objective here.
First and foremost, O'Reilly Network have been offering a lot of content for free and readers have been enjoying this benefit for a long time. Ask youself, have you been asked to pay a single cent for the O'Reilly Network content?
And in this particular instance, what O'Reilly has done is advertise that an PDF book is for sale (which happens to be mine). If you don't like it, just ignore it and move to the next article that is free. What a lot of readers do not understand is that publishers do need revenues to survive. The next time you see an advertisement on TV, please remember to write in to complain that "that is just pure spam".
I am sorry this comment of mine has nothing to do with ClickOnce and that I have wasted your valuable time reading it. -
This isn't an article, it is an advertisement
2006-04-13 11:17:58 kesfan [View]
You misunderstood my comment, I had no objection to you advertising your PDF book. My comment relates to the format of your advert. Every other item on this feed is an informative article. Your item is a pure advert disguised as an informative article.
Advertising goes both ways. You need viewers to make your advert effective. If you don't provide me a reason to watch this feed then I don't see your advert and it's pointless.
I refer you back to my original comment. Why not take the time to write a useful article on ClickOnce (that gives me something) and then use that opportunity to tell me about the benefits of your book (that gives you something). Everyone is then happy. -
This isn't an article, it is an advertisement
2006-04-12 10:46:00 Tara McGoldrick Walsh | [View]
You're right Joe--it's not an article, and we tried to be careful in our wording to let readers know this was a downloadable PDF.
Thanks for your input though.
Tara McGoldrick
O'Reilly Network










If you want to advertise your PDF's, fine - but don't advertise your product as a useful article when all it really is is a piece of marketing.
I expected to find some reasonable content or overview here - not a pitch for my cash.
-joe