News

Blazor, the red-hot Microsoft project that lets .NET developers use C# for web development instead of JavaScript, is now being pointed toward the mobile realm, targeting native iOS and Android apps.
Microsoft wants .NET developers to use its new experimental Blazor toolkit for building web apps to create native iOS and Android apps in C#. Microsoft this week announced Experimental Mobile ...
Microsoft's latest experimental release of its Mobile Blazor Bindings appears to be hitting the right note with .NET developers building native apps for iOS and Android. After announcing the new ...
WebAssembly is the power behind Blazor Google’s experiments with NaCl, its Chrome native client, alongside Mozilla’s work with ASM.js, led to the development of the World Wide Web Consortium ...
Take advantage of Blazor, Microsoft’s answer to full-stack development, to build rich web apps with C# and .NET Core.
Blazor WebAssembly is the principal hosting model for Blazor applications. Choosing this option means your application runs entirely inside the client's browser, making it a direct alternative to ...
According to Daniel Roth, principal program manager for ASP.NET at Microsoft: With Blazor a developer can write client-side web UI using .NET and C# instead of JavaScript.