Scott Guthrie:
Today we shipped the ASP.NET MVC 1.0 Release Candidate (RC).
We'll be releasing the ASP.NET MVC Release Candidate in January. Our plan is to have that build be ASP.NET MVC V1 API and feature-complete and have zero known bugs. — — We'll then ship the official V1 release shortly after that (so not far off now).
Phil Haack:
The sample project Jim posted has some fixes to the project that allow it to work in the actual cloud. There were a couple of minor bugs regarding rendering URLs with port numbers when using our form helpers (already fixed in our trunk) that would not affect most people, but does happen to affect running in the cloud.
Phil Haack (ja Jeff Atwood) PDC:ssä.
Learn how the new ASP.NET MVC framework differs from the current ASP.NET Web Forms framework. Learn to take advantage of ASP.NET MVC to build loosely coupled, highly testable, agile applications. See how ASP.NET MVC provides you with fine-grained control over HTML and JavaScript.
Scott Guthrie:
I'm excited today to announce that Microsoft will be shipping jQuery with Visual Studio going forward. We will distribute the jQuery JavaScript library as-is, and will not be forking or changing the source from the main jQuery branch.