7th
MAR

Building a Web 2.0 Portal with ASP.NET 3.5

Posted by GaQuay under Dot NET

Building a Web 2.0 Portal with ASP.NET 3.5

My first book “Building a Web 2.0 Portal with ASP.NET 3.5″ from O’Reilly is published and available in the stores. This book explains in detail the architecture design, development, test, deployment, performance and scalability challenges of my open source web portal Dropthings.com. Dropthings is a prototype of a web portal similar to iGoogle or Pageflakes. But this portal is developed using recently released brand new technologies like ASP.NET 3.5, C# 3.0, Linq to Sql, Linq to XML, and Windows Workflow foundation. It makes heavy use of ASP.NET AJAX 1.0. Throughout my career I have built several state-of-the-art personal, educational, enterprise and mass consumer web portals. This book collects my experience in building all of those portals.

Disclaimer: This book does not show you how to build Pageflakes. Dropthings is entirely different in terms of architecture, implementation and the technologies involved.

You learn how to:

* Implement a highly decoupled architecture following the popular n-tier, widget-based application model
* Provide drag-and-drop functionality, and use ASP.NET 3.5 to build the server-side part of the web layer
* Use LINQ to build the data access layer, and Windows Workflow Foundation to build the business layer as a collection of workflows
* Build client-side widgets using JavaScript for faster performance and better caching
* Get maximum performance out of the ASP.NET AJAX Framework for faster, more dynamic, and scalable sites
* Build a custom web service call handler to overcome shortcomings in ASP.NET AJAX 1.0 for asynchronous, transactional, cache-friendly web services
* Overcome JavaScript performance problems, and help the user interface load faster and be more responsive
* Solve various scalability and security problems as your site grows from hundreds to millions of users
* Deploy and run a high-volume production site while solving software, hardware, hosting, and Internet infrastructure problems

If you’re ready to build state-of-the art, high-volume web applications that can withstand millions of hits per day, this book has exactly what you need.

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