NET developers can now test-drive foxtrot xray development tools
Released on = September 10, 2006, 3:32 pm
Press Release Author = foxtrot_xray:software
Industry = Computers
Press Release Summary = foxtrot_xray:software has released free trial versions of their .NET components: the WebRobot web interaction component, the Announcer local network communications component, and the Segment edge-detection and image segmentation component.
Press Release Body = Following the release of the Segment v1.0 component, foxtrot_xray:software has released free fully-functional trial versions of their .NET components, allowing developers a glimpse at how much more they can accomplish with less code.
The trial version of the WebRobot v1.1 component allows you to interact with web sites and applications, directly from your .NET code. Static pages or interactive AJAX sites, the WebRobot will allow you to interact with any and all sites. The free trial version of the WebRobot is available at: http://foxtrot-xray.com/main/prod/dev/web-robot-demo.zip
The trial version of the Announcer v1.0 component is a self-contained, lightweight message-passing component, to enable your .NET projects to communicate on a local area network. Extremely low CPU utilization, small memory footprint, and automatic detection and connection-handling functionality enable the developer to focus on the software, not on debugging messy networking code. The free trial version of the Announcer component is available at: http://foxtrot-xray.com/main/prod/dev/announcer-demo.zip
The Segment v1.0 component is a color-based automatic edge detection and image segmentation component that allows you to find regions in your images, and manipulate them at will. Cut, highlight, track, or extract regions from your images with a few lines of code. The trial version of the Segment component is availabe at: http://foxtrot-xray.com/main/prod/dev/segment.zip
The fully-functional trial versions of the foxtrot_xray components for .NET allow developers to see how much more they can accomplish with less code. From smart applications that interact with the web, to dynamic network-aware applications, to complex image recognition, developers can do it all in just a few simple lines of code.