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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"PUFFY" redirects here. For the American hip hop artist, see Sean Combs . For other uses, see Puffy .
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification . Please help by adding reliable sources . Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately , especially if potentially libelous or harmful. Find sources: "Puffy AmiYumi" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( November 2008 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
Yumi Yoshimura (left) and Ami Onuki (right) performing as Puffy at Japan Expo 2009

^ Segal, David (July 22, 2002). "Puffy: Pop With A Japanese Accent" . Washington Post .

^ Weller, Jam (August 26, 2005). "Japanese Beatles" . Chicago Tribune .

^ J!-ENT 50-PAGE SPECIAL FEATURE: Puffy AmiYumi 15th Year Anniversary featuring interviews from 2000-2010 by Dennis A. Amith . Nt2009.com, Accessed December 5, 2010.

^ "Puffy 10th Anniversary Book 'Ayumi'", Ami Interview Chapters 1 and 2, Sony Magazines Inc., 2006

^ "Puffy 10th Anniversary Book 'Ayumi'", Ami Interview Chapters 1 and 2, Yumi Interview Chapters 1 and 2, Sony Magazines Inc., 2006

^ Whelski, Tina. "Feature: Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi" Archived 2006-03-16 at archive.today . WOMANROCK , August/September 2005. Accessed December 7, 2006.

^ Amith, Dennis A. (March 2001). "Prepare for the Puffy Invasion" . nt2009 Entertainment . p. 1. Archived from the original on 24 June 2002 . Retrieved 1 December 2021 .

^ Bruner, Rob. "Sayonara, Puffy" . Entertainment Weekly , April 3, 2001. Accessed December 7, 2006. Archived December 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine

^ "Unknown title" . YouTube . Retrieved 2016-11-30 . [ dead YouTube link ]

^ "YouTube" . YouTube . Archived from the original on 2017-04-10 . Retrieved 2016-11-30 .

^ "Super-Ultimate Awesome Exploration America 2006 by Tally Hall" . YouTube . Archived from the original on 2021-12-21.

^ "PUFFY to hold U.S. tour in April" . tokyohive . 6Theory Media, LLC. January 4, 2017 . Retrieved January 14, 2021 .

^ "Guest Info: Puffy AmiYumi" . Animeboston.com . Retrieved April 3, 2017 .

^ Fuoco, Christina. " LiveDaily Interview: Puffy AmiYumi " Archived 2006-10-21 at archive.today . LiveDaily , July 19, 2006. Accessed October 16, 2007.

^ "Cartoon Network Unveils Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi Float For the 79th Annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade" (Press release). Time Warner. 31 October 2005. Archived from the original on 26 November 2005 . Retrieved 7 December 2006 .

^ "Puffy appointed goodwill ambassadors to U.S. for tourism" Archived 2006-02-13 at the Wayback Machine , Kyodo News , January 16, 2006. Accessed December 7, 2006.

^ Jennifer Sherman (2011-08-04). "Rock Duo Puffy to Voice-Act in Usagi Drop Anime" . Anime News Network .

^ "Hi Hi Puffy Amiyumi (Expanded European Edition)" . Archived from the original on 2019-02-09.


Wikimedia Commons has media related to Puffy AmiYumi .
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Puffy ( パフィー , Pafī , stylized as PUFFY ) is a Japanese pop rock duo formed in Tokyo in 1995, consisting of singers Ami Onuki and Yumi Yoshimura . In the United States, they adopted the name Puffy AmiYumi to avoid legal naming conflicts with Sean Combs , who also performed under the name Puffy. They sing in Japanese and English.

Onuki and Yoshimura were scouted by Sony-affiliated talent agencies and put together in the mid-1990s. Most of their work was produced or co-written by Tamio Okuda and Andy Sturmer , formerly of the bands Unicorn and Jellyfish , respectively. [1] [2]

The pair's first release " Asia no Junshin " (1996) sold a million records. They gained mainstream success in Japan during 1998, following the release of their album Jet CD and continued with several more full-length releases (totaling 15 million sales in Japan). [3]

In 2004, an animated series featuring cartoon versions of Onuki and Yoshimura, Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi , premiered on the US Cartoon Network . Although their characters were voiced by actresses, the singers portrayed themselves for short live-action segments taped in Japan.

When she was in high school, Ami sang for a band called "Hanoi Sex". In her sophomore year, the band auditioned during the Sony SD Audition and passed, becoming employees of Sony Music Entertainment. Years went by with little action by either the band or the record label, as Ami took vocal lessons and attended a professional school to learn how to become a better performer. Eventually the band dissolved, leaving only Ami under Sony's employment. She was encouraged to stay, despite lacking a band and a clear musical direction. [4]

Separately, Yumi had learned of the Chotto Sokomade talent search underway by Sony Music Artists when she was "around 18". She also auditioned and passed. She moved on her own from Osaka to Tokyo, where she eventually met Ami by chance in the Sony Music offices and then at a concert after-party, when the two hit it off. Both felt alone within the large Sony organization and neither were confident in their abilities as solo artists, so even though Ami had already recorded a solo CD under the guidance of former Unicorn front-man Tamio Okuda (it would later become half of solosolo ), they requested Sony pair them as a duo. [5]

Producer and American pop musician Andy Sturmer christened them "Puffy", and is considered by Ami and Yumi as "the godfather of Puffy". Ami had previously met Tamio Okuda at a Sparks Gogo concert, and he had produced her then-unreleased solo CD. He was eventually signed on to produce Puffy's first album AmiYumi . Their debut single, "Asia no Junshin", launched Puffy-mania. Asked if they were surprised by the attention after its success, Yumi told an interviewer "... everything that was put together for that song all came together and made it happen, but we didn't expect it. It was luck." [6]

As "Puffy-mania" exploded, they became multimedia stars, including hosting their own weekly TV show Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Puffy with guests such as Lenny Kravitz , Sylvester Stallone , Harrison Ford , and rock band Garbage .

Puffy made their first US appearance as part of Music Japan's "An Evening with Japan's All-Stars" showcase at the 2000 South by Southwest (SXSW) festival in Austin, Texas . [7] After their performance at SXSW, attorneys for Sean "Puffy" Combs sent the band a cease and desist letter asking them to change their name. After changing their name in the US to Puffy AmiYumi, they told Entertainment Weekly : [8]

Yumi: It doesn't bother us at all. We respect the fact that Puff Daddy is Puffy in the U.S. Ami: The bottom line is that we don't know what puffy means. We were given our name by somebody else six years ago, and we really don't have a clue.
After Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Puffy ended production in 2002, Puffy focused on performing in the United States. Several of their previous Japanese albums were released for the US market and they recorded theme songs for the animated series Teen Titans and SD Gundam Force . They have also done a cover version with Cyndi Lauper of her hit "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun". They were also interviewed on Jimmy Kimmel Live! by Jimmy Kimmel [9] and performed their songs "Hi Hi" and " Akai Buranko " (Red Swing) [10] on the show. They came back to the US in 2006 for their Splurge Tour, and also toured with Tally Hall for Super-Ultimate Awesome Exploration America 2006 [11] In January 2017, they announced for the US tour titled Puffy AmiYumi US TOUR 2017: NOT LAZY in April 2017. [12] In the same month, the band made an appearance at Anime Boston for autograph signings. [13] After their appearance at Boston Anime Convention they undertook a three city USA Tour which they called their 'Not Lazy Tour' of the cities of San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Dallas, Texas.

On November 19, 2004, an animated series featuring cartoon versions of Ami and Yumi, Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi , premiered on the United States' Cartoon Network . Despite both of them being voiced by American actresses (though Janice Kawaye , who plays Ami, is of Japanese descent), the real Ami and Yumi star in short live-action segments taped in Japan. The show also featured some of Puffy's music. Cartoon Network's Japan service started airing episodes of the series (in English with Japanese subtitles) in 2005. In October of that year, TV Tokyo began airing a Japanese-dubbed version of the series, which eventually also went to CN Japan on January 8, 2006. Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi also debuted in other countries such as Mexico, dubbed in Spanish, and Brazil, dubbed in Brazilian Portuguese, both transmitted on Cartoon Network.

Yumi said in an interview with LiveDaily : [14]

Yumi: The Cartoon Network show has given us a great opportunity to introduce the music to a new audience. When we toured, after the Cartoon Network show started, so many little kids came to our show. We always wanted as many people as possible to listen to the music.
Puffy AmiYumi made an appearance and performed in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2005 where they were also represented by their own Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi float and balloon. [15]

On January 16, 2006 Ami and Yumi were appointed goodwill ambassadors to the United States as part of the Japanese government's campaign to encourage tourism in Japan. [16] They kicked off their 10th anniversary tour in Japan on April 14, 2006, then toured the East Coast of the United States with the PuffyAmiYumi Tour '06 Splurge! Splurge! Splurge! from July 8 to July 19, 2006, coinciding with the premiere of their new television show, Hi Hi PUFFY Bu .

Ami and Yumi also performed cameo voice overs in an episode of the 2011 anime series, Usagi Drop , which aired on July 8, 2011. They also performed the opening theme to the anime. [17]

Their music has been largely a collaboration between producer Tamio Okuda , American singer-songwriter Andy Sturmer , and Ami and Yumi themselves. Ami and Yumi's vocals have been likened to U.S. vocal sister group The Roches . [18] They often sing whole songs together with harmonies and their sound borrows heavily from The Beatles and other artists such as ABBA , The Who , and The Carpenters . Both Ami and Yumi themselves have openly admitted that their music is hard to put into just one genre because of the many different influences. [ citation needed ]

They have mentioned Okuda, The Blue Hearts , Boom Boom Satellites , and Blankey Jet City as their main influences, and named their album Jet CD after Blankey Jet City .


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Free and open-source software platform developed by Microsoft
For the earlier framework, see .NET Framework . For the top-level domain, see .net . For other uses, see .net (disambiguation) .
6.0.8 [1] 
/ 9 August 2022 ; 11 days ago ( 9 August 2022 )

^ The prefix "Ryu" is the Japanese word for "dragon" (竜, ryū ), and is a reference to the book Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools (commonly known as the dragon book, from an early cover design), as well as to a character from the video game Street Fighter . [41]




^ https://dotnet.microsoft.com/en-us/download/dotnet/6.0 ; retrieved: 9 August 2022.

^ Jump up to: a b "core/LICENSE.TXT" . GitHub . Retrieved June 4, 2018 .

^ "Download .NET Core" . microsoft.com . Microsoft . Retrieved October 31, 2017 .

^ ".NET Core is the Future of .NET" . May 6, 2019.

^ ".NET Framework is dead – long live .NET 5" . May 7, 2019.

^ de Icaza, Miguel . "Microsoft Open Sources .NET and Mono" . Personal blog of Miguel de Icaza . Retrieved November 16, 2014 .

^ Landwerth, Immo (November 12, 2014). ".NET Core is Open Source" . .NET Framework Blog . Microsoft . Retrieved December 30, 2014 .

^ "dotnet/corefx" . GitHub . Retrieved November 16, 2014 .

^ "Microsoft/referencesource" . GitHub . Retrieved November 16, 2014 .

^ Bright, Peter (June 27, 2016). ".NET Core 1.0 released, now officially supported by Red Hat" . Ars Technica . Condé Nast .

^ Foley, Mary Jo (June 27, 2016). "Microsoft showcases SQL Server, .NET Core on Red Hat Enterprise Linux deliverables" . ZDNet . CBS Interactive .

^ "Announcing .NET Core Tools 1.0 | .NET Blog" . Blogs.msdn.microsoft.com. March 7, 2017 . Retrieved January 18, 2020 .

^ "Announcing .NET Core 2.0" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. August 14, 2017.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 2.1" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. May 30, 2018.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 2.2" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. December 4, 2018.

^ ".NET Core is the Future of .NET" . .NET Blog . May 6, 2019 . Retrieved May 17, 2019 .

^ "What's new in .NET Core 3.0" . .NET documentation . Retrieved December 30, 2020 .

^ "Announcing .NET 5.0" . .NET Blog . November 10, 2020 . Retrieved November 21, 2020 .

^ Lander, Richard (November 8, 2021). "Announcing .NET 6 – The Fastest .NET Yet" . .NET Blog . Retrieved May 6, 2022 .

^ ".NET Core official support policy" . .NET . Microsoft.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 1.0" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. June 27, 2016.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 1.1" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. November 16, 2016.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 2.0" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. August 14, 2017.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 2.1" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. May 30, 2018.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 2.2" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. December 4, 2018.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 3.0" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. September 23, 2019.

^ "Announcing .NET Core 3.1" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. December 3, 2019.

^ "Announcing .NET 5.0" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. November 10, 2020.

^ "Announcing .NET 6" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. November 8, 2021.

^ "Alpine 3.10.0 released | Alpine Linux" . alpinelinux.org . Retrieved June 9, 2020 .

^ "dotnet/core" . GitHub . Retrieved June 9, 2020 .

^ "Announcing .NET 5.0" . .NET Blog . Microsoft. November 10, 2020.

^ ".NET framework supports different programming languages" . Retrieved April 21, 2022 .

^ "Visual Basic in .NET Core 3.0 | Visual Basic Blog" . Blogs.msdn.microsoft.com. October 12, 2019 . Retrieved January 18, 2020 .

^ "Visual Basic support planned for .NET 5.0 | Visual Basic Blog" . Blogs.msdn.microsoft.com. March 11, 2020 . Retrieved August 26, 2020 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Carter, Phillip; Knezevic, Zlatko (April 2016). ".NET Core – .NET Goes Cross-Platform with .NET Core" . MSDN Magazine . Microsoft .

^ Lander, Rich (May 7, 2018). ".NET Core 3 and Support for Windows Desktop Applications" . MSDN . Microsoft .

^ ".NET Core 2.1, 3.1, and .NET 5.0 updates are coming to Microsoft Update" . .NET Blog . December 3, 2020 . Retrieved December 15, 2020 .

^ "Understanding .NET Framework, .NET Core, .NET Standard And Future .NET" . www.c-sharpcorner.com . Retrieved February 1, 2021 .

^ Landwerth, Immo (February 3, 2015). "CoreCLR is now Open Source" . .NET Framework Blog . Microsoft . Retrieved February 27, 2015 .

^ "Why RyuJIT? How was the name chosen?" . nuWave eSolutions Development Team Blog . November 25, 2014 . Retrieved June 21, 2016 .

^ Ramel, David (August 31, 2020). "Microsoft Survey: Developers Held Back by Lack of 'Native AOT' in .NET Core -" . Visual Studio Magazine . Archived from the original on October 22, 2020 . Retrieved February 1, 2021 .

^ Landwerth, Immo (December 4, 2014). "Introducing .NET Core" . .NET Framework Blog . Microsoft . Retrieved February 27, 2015 .

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^ Wang, Abel (September 9, 2020). What is the dotnet bot? (Podcast). Microsoft. Event occurs at 4 seconds in . Retrieved March 9, 2021 .


Wikibooks has a book on the topic of: .NET Development Foundation
Wikiversity has learning resources about Introduction to .NET
Welcome to a sneak preview of the new design for Wikipedia!
We would love your feedback on our changes
.NET (pronounced as " dot net" ; previously named .NET Core ) is a free and open-source , managed computer software framework for Windows , Linux , and macOS operating systems . [3] It is a cross-platform [4] successor to .NET Framework . [5] The project is primarily developed by Microsoft employees by way of the .NET Foundation , and released under the MIT License . [2]

On November 12, 2014, Microsoft announced .NET Core, in an effort to include cross-platform support for .NET, including Linux and macOS, source for the .NET Core CoreCLR implementation, source for the "entire [...] library stack" for .NET Core, and the adoption of a conventional ("bazaar"-like) open-source development model under the stewardship of the .NET Foundation . Miguel de Icaza describes .NET Core as a "redesigned version of .NET that is based on the simplified version of the class libraries", [6] and Microsoft's Immo Landwerth explained that .NET Core would be "the foundation of all future .NET platforms". At the time of the announcement, the initial release of the .NET Core project had been seeded with a subset of the libraries' source code and coincided with the relicensing of Microsoft's existing .NET reference source away from the restrictions of the Ms-RSL . Landwerth acknowledged the disadvantages of the formerly selected shared license, explaining that it made codename Rotor "a non-starter" as a community-developed open source project because it did not meet the criteria of an Open Source Initiative (OSI) approved license. [7] [8] [9]

.NET Core 1.0 was released on June 27, 2016, [10] along with Microsoft Visual Studio 2015 Update 3, which enables .NET Core development. [11] .NET Core 1.0.4 and .NET Core 1.1.1 were released along with .NET Core Tools 1.0 and Visual Studio 2017 on March 7, 2017. [12]

.NET Core 2.0 was released on August 14, 2017, along with Visual Studio 2017 15.3, ASP.NET Core 2.0, and Entity Framework Core 2.0. [13] .NET Core 2.1 was released on May 30, 2018. [14] NET Core 2.2 was released on December 4, 2018. [15]

.NET Core 3 was released on September 23, 2019. [16] .NET Core 3 adds support for Windows desktop application development [17] and significant performance improvements throughout the base library.

In November 2020, Microsoft released .NET 5.0. The "Core" branding was removed and version 4.0 was skipped to avoid conflation with .NET Framework, which remains the Windows-specific product. It addresses the patent concerns related to the .NET Framework. [18]

In November 2021, Microsoft released .NET 6.0. [19]

.NET supports Alpine Linux (Alpine primarily supports and uses musl libc [30] ), i.e. since .NET Core 2.1. [31]

As of .NET 5, Windows Arm64 is natively supported. Previously, .NET on ARM was applications compiled for the x86 architecture, thereby meaning the applications were using the ARM emulation layer. [32]

.NET fully supports C# and F# (and C++/CLI as of 3.1; only enabled on Windows) and supports Visual Basic .NET (for version 15.5 in .NET Core 5.0.100-preview.4, and some old versions supported in old .NET Core). [33]

VB.NET compiles and runs on .NET, but as of .NET Core 3.1, the separate Visual Basic Runtime is not implemented. Microsoft initially announced that .NET Core 3
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