.NET Framework

With .NET 7 Core Framework, clients are jumping into the most up-to-date and flexible framework released by Microsoft, keeping up with technology and security trends. The payoff for RSI clients will be immense.

To adapt tools to the newest environments RSI upgrades client systems to the .NET 7 Core framework.

A framework of operation refers to the tools used to create applications. Specifically, about the programming languages, class libraries, and other tools used to build small programs, user-interface applications, background processes, and much more. A framework is the backbone behind most modern applications as it simplifies the process for developers to transform ideas into functioning parts.

When referring to .NET, it is the framework developed and updated by Microsoft since 2002. While individual updates introduce incremental changes, the culmination of these updates into full versions of a framework deployment have the capacity to greatly enhance work as software developers, especially when it comes to introducing new and more efficient functionality for an RSI client.

Within .NET there is a division between .NET Core and .NET Framework. The latter is the original framework developed for applications to work exclusively on Windows machines. The former is the framework developed for applications to work on any non-mobile operating system, including Windows, Apple, and Linux devices.

Many applications could be developed within an older version of .NET Framework, RSI is able to recognize if the client’s scope is being limited using Windows machines, by closing off outdated applications and implementing new and expanding functionality.  With .NET 7 Core Framework, clients are jumping into the most up-to-date and flexible framework released by Microsoft, keeping up with technology and security trends, and the payoff for RSI clients will be immense.