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Remote Access (Development)

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  • L leppie

    Very good too. In fact, performance wise, TFS and SVN beats all these fancy pansy distributed version control systems.

    xacc.ide
    IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
    ((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth Edition

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    Tony 1
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    :) So a possible solution may be to go TFS or SVN for source and access that over HTTP (although I would have to work around not having one of them for a few weeks). The development itself would be local including testing against SQL Server and local IIS. That would work ok because the web site I will be working on is self contained and I will be the only one working on it. If I can get them to put the test web box in the DMZ (maybe restrict by IP) then I could publish new versions directly to the server and then test the pages against the *real* test database. I am starting to feel a bit more *comfortable* with the idea, thanks. And if it all works smoothly I can spend more time on the beach!!

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    • T Tony 1

      The company are quite new to development, so VSS was the no-brainer for starting up. They are now talking about getting a better solution, not sure if it will be TFS though. Another contractor there would prefer a non MS solution so that' open right now.

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      Brady Kelly
      wrote on last edited by
      #25

      Tony.1 wrote:

      Another contractor there would prefer a non MS solution so that' open right now.

      That smells funny to me. I think he hasn't considered that MS source control is bad (VSS) so much as he thinks MS per se is bad.

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      • B Brady Kelly

        Tony.1 wrote:

        Another contractor there would prefer a non MS solution so that' open right now.

        That smells funny to me. I think he hasn't considered that MS source control is bad (VSS) so much as he thinks MS per se is bad.

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        leppie
        wrote on last edited by
        #26

        Brady Kelly wrote:

        That smells funny to me.

        Probably one of those Ruby types on a Mac :)

        xacc.ide
        IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
        ((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth Edition

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        • T Tony 1

          Hi, This is the first time I have posted a question and I couldn't find a forum that I thought was relevant to it, other than here. I am a contract software developer currently located in the UK but moving to Melbourne in 2 weeks. A previous client has asked me if I could work remotely in Australia, connecting to a machine in their UK office, to continue developing software for them (.NET Web/Win SQL etc.). I know that technically it is quite straight forward, I have worked remotely in the UK before (VPN) to a local office. However, I am investigating whether or not this is feasible from the point of view of response times, because I would be working intensively and therefore sending many key strokes and expecting a rapid response from Oz <=> UK. Do you have any information that may help me decide whether or not the proposal is workable?

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          alex barylski
          wrote on last edited by
          #27

          1. Don't use VPN install SSH and SVNServe on the Windows machine and access the repo using ssh+svn 2. Very feasible. I worked for several companies around the world (one being in Sydney) and I'm in Central Canada

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          • T Tony 1

            Hi, This is the first time I have posted a question and I couldn't find a forum that I thought was relevant to it, other than here. I am a contract software developer currently located in the UK but moving to Melbourne in 2 weeks. A previous client has asked me if I could work remotely in Australia, connecting to a machine in their UK office, to continue developing software for them (.NET Web/Win SQL etc.). I know that technically it is quite straight forward, I have worked remotely in the UK before (VPN) to a local office. However, I am investigating whether or not this is feasible from the point of view of response times, because I would be working intensively and therefore sending many key strokes and expecting a rapid response from Oz <=> UK. Do you have any information that may help me decide whether or not the proposal is workable?

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            Christian Graus
            wrote on last edited by
            #28

            Hey Tony. I am in Tasmania ( which is where people from Melbourne go when they want their quality of life to improve ). I work for companies in the US. Fast broadband is easy to get in Melbourne, so I don't see how there will be any issues with what you want to do. I use an online source control provider to provide shared access to source, and try to VPN as little as possible, but it works fine when I do it. I've worked from home for about 4-5 years now, with good success.

            Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

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            • V Vikram A Punathambekar

              Tony.1 wrote:

              They are now talking about getting a better solution, not sure if it will be TFS though. Another contractor there would prefer a non MS solution so that' open right now.

              I'll give the first vote for SVN. :thumbsup:

              Cheers, Vikram. (Cracked not one CCC, but two!)

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              Christian Graus
              wrote on last edited by
              #29

              SVN is crap.

              Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

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              • T Tony 1

                Hi, This is the first time I have posted a question and I couldn't find a forum that I thought was relevant to it, other than here. I am a contract software developer currently located in the UK but moving to Melbourne in 2 weeks. A previous client has asked me if I could work remotely in Australia, connecting to a machine in their UK office, to continue developing software for them (.NET Web/Win SQL etc.). I know that technically it is quite straight forward, I have worked remotely in the UK before (VPN) to a local office. However, I am investigating whether or not this is feasible from the point of view of response times, because I would be working intensively and therefore sending many key strokes and expecting a rapid response from Oz <=> UK. Do you have any information that may help me decide whether or not the proposal is workable?

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                Mycroft Holmes
                wrote on last edited by
                #30

                When I moved to Singapore I had to let my favourite client in Sydney go, I could not do the work justice. The pipe to Oz is just not wide enough, this was 5 years ago. I had done some support work with them in both Singapore and the UK in the past and knew development just would not work. I found the remote meetings to discuss requirements just too frustrating, from the UK the phone conferences at 11pm began to wear, by that time I wanted to be relaxing. So even if you get the technical aspects sorted you may find the personal wear and tear irritating. Mind you I'm an old fart who no longer is willing to pull an allnighter unless there is an emergency.

                Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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                • C Christian Graus

                  SVN is crap.

                  Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

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                  Vikram A Punathambekar
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #31

                  Oh, get lost ;) you'll say that about anything! :laugh:

                  Cheers, Vikram. (Cracked not one CCC, but two!)

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                  • T Tony 1

                    Hi, This is the first time I have posted a question and I couldn't find a forum that I thought was relevant to it, other than here. I am a contract software developer currently located in the UK but moving to Melbourne in 2 weeks. A previous client has asked me if I could work remotely in Australia, connecting to a machine in their UK office, to continue developing software for them (.NET Web/Win SQL etc.). I know that technically it is quite straight forward, I have worked remotely in the UK before (VPN) to a local office. However, I am investigating whether or not this is feasible from the point of view of response times, because I would be working intensively and therefore sending many key strokes and expecting a rapid response from Oz <=> UK. Do you have any information that may help me decide whether or not the proposal is workable?

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                    Duncan Edwards Jones
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #32

                    I have worked with people in Mumbai VPN-ing into dev boxes in the states so yes it is doable.

                    '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Merrion Computing Ltd

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                    • T Tony 1

                      Good point. I was thinking that maybe I could just login remotely to lock the source and copy it (although that may end up being a pain when I need to change lots of existing code). Then I could set up my own source control locally and work against a local copy of the SQL Server DB.

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                      Jorgen Sigvardsson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #33

                      Even easier.. keep a local repository (of your choice - subversion maybe?). Then when it's time to commit to their repository, you just make an export (unversioned copy) from the repository, copy the files to the UK, and have a local VSS client merge in the changes.

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                      • C Christian Graus

                        SVN is crap.

                        Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

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                        J Offline
                        Jorgen Sigvardsson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #34

                        Well, stop breaking it then!

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