A year ago, I wrote a post about three projects that I thought would be useful for .NET developers but didn’t exist at the time. I thought it would be fun with a follow-up on that post.

1. Silverlight XHTML editor

Rich text editors like FreeTextBox and FCKeditor are extremely difficult to do right, so I wasn’t expecting a Silverlight rich text editor anytime soon. Back then Silverlight was also still in beta. A little while back I noticed that Michael Sync has started a CodePlex project of a Silverlight rich text editor. Way to go Michael!

2. OpenID membership provider for ASP.NET

I’ve really needed a plug ‘n play membership provider that supported OpenID natively. Then came along exactly that, which also is open source and available at Google Code. Good stuff, but it would be cooler if no third-party assemblies where used to make it easier to modify the code. Thumbs up anyway!

3. ASP.NET MonsterID implementation

A MonsterID is a visual image representation of an e-mail address that can be used either as a security measure or as an avatar. Only a few days after I wrote the post, Alexander Schuc wrote his MonsterID HttpHandler. This was so good that we implemented it in BlogEngine.NET 1.2. Now Gravatar supports it natively as well. Good job!

There are still a few projects that I think would be great contributions to .NET developers.

1. OAuth .NET library

The starting-to-get-popular API authentication mechanism, OAuth, would be a great addition to the .NET toolbox. Google and others are soon to support OAuth and we need both the server and client mechanisms. That would make it possible to both send and retrieve data to and from third-parties.

Update: It already exist right here code.google.com/p/devdefined-tools/wiki/OAuth

2. Semantic document writer

The relative new semantic document types such as FOAF and SIOC can be a bit tough to write yourself. They use the RDF XML format which is pretty tough to both read and write without the right tools. I would think a simple library would help democratizing these standard formats and broaden their reach. As an open source project, the library would also quickly adhere to best practices for writing these documents.

Am I missing some non-existing projects?

As I wrote 10 days ago, a new BlogEngine.NET release had to be made to deal with some issues found in version 1.4. It’s exactly one month since the release of the 1.4 version and a lot has been fixed, tweaked and changed.

Besides some new cool features, more than 50 work items from the issue tracker at CodePlex have been implemented. That’s a lot of modified code and the result is significant. Here’s a list of some of the changes in version 1.4.5.

One of the exiting new things is that BlogEngine.NET now is released with SQL Server, MySQL, SQLite and VistaDB scripts and databases. That makes it really easy to choose the database that suits you best if you don’t want to go with the default XML provider. And by easy I mean as easy as copying a couple of files to the bin and App_Data folder and you’re all set to go.

I know some of you have had some issues with the 1.4 release, so I really hope you’ll enjoy this new version.

Download it now