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  3. Is anyone else considering skipping the VS2008 generation?

Is anyone else considering skipping the VS2008 generation?

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  • M martin_hughes

    Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

    Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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    Dan Neely
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    unless I jump projects late/never adoptor. I currently need both NT4 and win2k support. The former is holding me back to VS03, and IIRC the later will continue to hold me at VS05 even after the client finishes retiring it's most antiquidated hardware.

    -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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    • M martin_hughes

      Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

      Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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      Dave Sexton
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      I'd love to dive right in but the company I work for is almost completely web service based & hence I never get to work with WPF, Silverlight, LINQ or any other of the new features during my normal day to day routine. That said, however, I do plan to do a few projects for myself (even if they never see the light of day) just to stay current. That I'm mad about technology is a bonus :D

      But fortunately we have the nanny-state politicians who can step in to protect us poor stupid consumers, most of whom would not know a JVM from a frozen chicken. Bruce Pierson
      Because programming is an art, not a science. Marc Clifton

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      • M martin_hughes

        Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

        Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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        Flynn Arrowstarr Regular Schmoe
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        Probably dive in myself. I'm currently playing with WPF, so having "native" development tools would be nice. :-> Flynn


        If we can't corrupt the youth of today,
        the adults of tomorrow will be no fun...

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        • M martin_hughes

          Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

          Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

          M Offline
          M Offline
          Member 96
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          My one and only interest in vs2008 is if they have improved support for Vista (%allusersprofile% location) in setup and deployment projects and I think I'll probably do a workaround instead. I'll very likely skip it as long as possible. I have no use for wpf or Linq at the moment and for the foreseeable future.


          Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscripti catapultas habebunt

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          • M martin_hughes

            Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

            Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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            C Offline
            Chris Losinger
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            i'd like to... but since people will be demanding vs08-compatible versions of our C++ libs, i guess i'll have to get a copy sooner rather than later.

            image processing toolkits | batch image processing

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            • M martin_hughes

              Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

              Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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              Colin Angus Mackay
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              martin_hughes wrote:

              Is anyone else considering skipping the VS2008 generation? Or becoming a late adopter?

              I'm jumping in. The CLR is still at Version 2.0, it is just the C# compiler (3.0) and .NET Framework (3.5) that are the big changes. VS2008 also has support for multiple versions of the framework, so I can ditch VS2005 yet still work on .NET 2.0 applications.

              martin_hughes wrote:

              Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet.

              .NET 3.0 and 3.5 are both additive. They do not change what exists in .NET 2.0. So you still have a chance to do .NET 2.0 to death, although I personally wouldn't restrict myself. The LINQ stuff alone is enough for me to want to upgrade. LINQ is just a few extra classes and some compiler trickery.

              martin_hughes wrote:

              Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside

              There is a lot I'm waiting to see where it is going first. But for things like WCF I can see immediate advantages. WPF and Silverlight I think will make it, but I'm waiting a bit before I completely jump in on those. WF (Workflow Foundation) is the thing that no one really seems to talk about but is actually quite powerful - Things like the Web Client Software Factory use it.

              martin_hughes wrote:

              it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

              Been there, done that, then I re-entered the MS world and I've been fairly safe ever since.


              Upcoming FREE developer events: * Glasgow: SQL Server Managed Objects AND Reporting Services ... My website

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              • D Dave Sexton

                I'd love to dive right in but the company I work for is almost completely web service based & hence I never get to work with WPF, Silverlight, LINQ or any other of the new features during my normal day to day routine. That said, however, I do plan to do a few projects for myself (even if they never see the light of day) just to stay current. That I'm mad about technology is a bonus :D

                But fortunately we have the nanny-state politicians who can step in to protect us poor stupid consumers, most of whom would not know a JVM from a frozen chicken. Bruce Pierson
                Because programming is an art, not a science. Marc Clifton

                C Offline
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                Colin Angus Mackay
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                Dave Sexton wrote:

                I'd love to dive right in but the company I work for is almost completely web service based

                What about WCF? My company have its first WCF project entering its final phases just now and so far it looks like it was the right choice.


                Upcoming FREE developer events: * Glasgow: SQL Server Managed Objects AND Reporting Services ... My website

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                • M martin_hughes

                  Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                  Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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                  Fernando A Gomez F
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  The C++ standard will come until mid-to-late 2009. No more improvements for native C++, so there's no need for me to get VC9. Besides, I already spent many many many bucks with VC8 and frankly I'm not willing to spend more if I don't need to.


                  Hope is the negation of reality - Raistlin Majere

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                  • M martin_hughes

                    Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                    Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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                    D Offline
                    DaveX86
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    I used to be a total early adopter and I always promoted the new stuff to others when it came out, now I'm a totally late adopter/attempted skipper. I tried to skip Windows XP but they conspired against me. I love .Net 2.0 and I also feel I haven't explored the entirety of it along with VS2005 (which I adopted late). I managed to mostly skip VS2003, but I found I was behind and needed to do a lot of catchup to be fluent with .Net 2.0 and VS2005 They'll probably conspire against my late adoption of Vista/VS2008 but I'm going to make them work hard for it :) WPF, what little I know of it, still looks like a work in progress to me. I mostly want to stay in the region of the majority of the installed base...when they can honestly say that it's Vista/VS2008, then I'll take the plunge.

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                    • M martin_hughes

                      Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                      Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

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                      Nemanja Trifunovic
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      I don't even use VS for my personal needs, and at work the decision won't be mine anyway :)


                      Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                      • M martin_hughes

                        Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                        Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Mark Salsbery
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        I already dived right in.  I'm using VS 2008 100%, although I'm still targeting the .NET 2.0 framework. Mark

                        Mark Salsbery Microsoft MVP - Visual C++ :java:

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                        • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                          I don't even use VS for my personal needs, and at work the decision won't be mine anyway :)


                          Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                          M Offline
                          martin_hughes
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          Get a better job :)

                          Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

                          N 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • C Colin Angus Mackay

                            Dave Sexton wrote:

                            I'd love to dive right in but the company I work for is almost completely web service based

                            What about WCF? My company have its first WCF project entering its final phases just now and so far it looks like it was the right choice.


                            Upcoming FREE developer events: * Glasgow: SQL Server Managed Objects AND Reporting Services ... My website

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                            D Offline
                            Dave Sexton
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            I've been thinking of doing up a demo over December (if I'm not working) to use in a proposal in the new year. We've been really busy over the past few months, made a bit of a name for ourselves & were also recently bought (yay!) by a much bigger company so it's been a little crazy lately. Since we work with online payment processing we don't use any technology that's still in beta in our production environment. Best case scenario for WCF (that I can currently predict without any real metrics) is probably early to mid 2009 if we continue as we are currently. Quite possibly sooner but I prefer to under promise & over deliver.

                            But fortunately we have the nanny-state politicians who can step in to protect us poor stupid consumers, most of whom would not know a JVM from a frozen chicken. Bruce Pierson
                            Because programming is an art, not a science. Marc Clifton

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • M martin_hughes

                              Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                              Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Marc Clifton
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #17

                              Too much of what I see is half-baked, unecessary syntactical sugar, and unecessary for my work paradigm. I don't see anything that actually improves my current (what I consider high level of) productivity in terms of architecture or implementation. Until I do, I'll look on as to what others are doing with great curiosity and I'll certainly test my existing code base with VS2008 and .NET 3.5, but I'll probably live in VS2005 land unless there's a marked improvement to the IDE/debugger experience. Marc

                              Thyme In The Country
                              Interacx
                              My Blog

                              J 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • D DaveX86

                                I used to be a total early adopter and I always promoted the new stuff to others when it came out, now I'm a totally late adopter/attempted skipper. I tried to skip Windows XP but they conspired against me. I love .Net 2.0 and I also feel I haven't explored the entirety of it along with VS2005 (which I adopted late). I managed to mostly skip VS2003, but I found I was behind and needed to do a lot of catchup to be fluent with .Net 2.0 and VS2005 They'll probably conspire against my late adoption of Vista/VS2008 but I'm going to make them work hard for it :) WPF, what little I know of it, still looks like a work in progress to me. I mostly want to stay in the region of the majority of the installed base...when they can honestly say that it's Vista/VS2008, then I'll take the plunge.

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                Judah Gabriel Himango
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #18

                                David Lockwood wrote:

                                I love .Net 2.0 and I also feel I haven't explored the entirety of it along with VS2005

                                FYI, the new VS lets you continue to target .NET 2 and up.

                                Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Halloween and Celebrating Man's Festivals The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

                                D 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • M Marc Clifton

                                  Too much of what I see is half-baked, unecessary syntactical sugar, and unecessary for my work paradigm. I don't see anything that actually improves my current (what I consider high level of) productivity in terms of architecture or implementation. Until I do, I'll look on as to what others are doing with great curiosity and I'll certainly test my existing code base with VS2008 and .NET 3.5, but I'll probably live in VS2005 land unless there's a marked improvement to the IDE/debugger experience. Marc

                                  Thyme In The Country
                                  Interacx
                                  My Blog

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Judah Gabriel Himango
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #19

                                  Marc Clifton wrote:

                                  unless there's a marked improvement to the IDE/debugger experience.

                                  One thing that looks promising is the improved debugging experience for multithreaded apps[^]. The "step into .NET framework source" may prove useful as well.

                                  Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Halloween and Celebrating Man's Festivals The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

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                                  • M martin_hughes

                                    Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                                    Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Judah Gabriel Himango
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #20

                                    I'm wanting LINQ. It will really help simplify much of our code where we manipulate lists, collections, arrays, etc. Rather than custom loops all over the place, a simple LINQ query will do the trick. Nice and concise. We use a lot of anonymous methods too...the more terse lambda will improve readability. The built-in extension methods on IEnumerable<T> are really nice and will help improve code readability. So I'm an early adopter this time.

                                    Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Halloween and Celebrating Man's Festivals The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

                                    S 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • J Judah Gabriel Himango

                                      David Lockwood wrote:

                                      I love .Net 2.0 and I also feel I haven't explored the entirety of it along with VS2005

                                      FYI, the new VS lets you continue to target .NET 2 and up.

                                      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Halloween and Celebrating Man's Festivals The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

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                                      D Offline
                                      DaveX86
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #21

                                      Yeah?...does it run on XP? :)

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                                      • D DaveX86

                                        Yeah?...does it run on XP? :)

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                                        _Zorro_
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #22

                                        Vs 2008? Yes.

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                                        • M martin_hughes

                                          Or becoming a late adopter? Although there's a lot of cool stuff in .Net 3.5 I can't help but feel that I haven't done .Net 2.0 to death yet. Also, given the amount of stuff currently coming out of Microsoft, I do wonder whether it's best to wait and see what falls by the wayside, for instance WPF - from what I've seen people on CodeProject do with it it looks very cool... but it wouldn't be the first time I've devoted effort to learning something only to see the marketability of such skills divebomb into obscurity.

                                          Me: Can you see the "up" arrow? User:Errr...ummm....no. Me: Can you see an arrow that points upwards? User: Oh yes, I see it now! -Excerpt from a support call taken by me, 08/31/2007

                                          R Offline
                                          R Offline
                                          Rama Krishna Vavilala
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #23

                                          I am already using VS 2008 for a new development so I guess I am not becoming a late adopter.

                                          Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action CP Quote of the Day: It is the same Friday that blooms as a new enriching day with novelty and innovation for us every week. - Vasudevan Deepak Kumar

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