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Visual Studio with MSDN Premium

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • S Simon ORiordan from UK

    Vi? Of course, we 'ad it 'ard. We used to get up in 't morning, scrape some electrons off the clouds, put them into the right addresses on 't chips one at a time. The only way we knew it were working were if the gaffer didn't rip the roof off our shed and drive us out wit' steam hose. :laugh:

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    Lost User
    wrote on last edited by
    #29

    Chips? CHIPS!? You were lucky! We had melt sand in t'furnace - I say 'furnace', it were a lump o' coal being blown on by t' wife, and make us ain valves, t' plug togevva wit' wire we 'ad t' make oot o' fillings from our ain teef! But ye tell t' kids of today, an' they won't believe you!

    MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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    • L Lost User

      Man up! Use Vi

      MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

      OriginalGriffO Offline
      OriginalGriffO Offline
      OriginalGriff
      wrote on last edited by
      #30

      Vi? Vi? Vi was for wimps! It showed you your code all the time! ED and EDLIN had to be told to show us what we had typed! And if you didn't, then you just hoped what you typed would affect the right line(s)... :sigh: Gawd, was I ever happy when I found BRIEF ("The Programmers Editor") - I still wish for the windowing features it had in VS nowadays!

      Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

      "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
      "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt

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      • J John Korondy

        Not true. Developers are the lifeblood of MSFT and we create the ecosystem from which they generate $billions of profit. Unfortunately, they do not understand the developer community. If they did, they would have free MSDN licenses for individual developers and charge for corporate licenses for those who develop commercial products. Developers like me generate huge revenues and profits for MSFT through SQL Server, Office, Azure, etc. licenses yet we have to pay dearly for the privilege (Visual Studio license fees, MSDN subscription, TFS, training fees and alike). It is just sad.

        L Offline
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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #31

        John Korondy wrote:

        Not true.

        What's not true? I think maybe this reply belongs somewhere else.

        Veni, vidi, abiit domum

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        • L Lost User

          Chips? CHIPS!? You were lucky! We had melt sand in t'furnace - I say 'furnace', it were a lump o' coal being blown on by t' wife, and make us ain valves, t' plug togevva wit' wire we 'ad t' make oot o' fillings from our ain teef! But ye tell t' kids of today, an' they won't believe you!

          MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

          S Offline
          S Offline
          Simon ORiordan from UK
          wrote on last edited by
          #32

          Teeth? We used to dream of having teeth. They gave a pound of Tofu every month, and that was between seven of us! We had to suck it off the boss's doormats before letting out the Tartary Apes he used as Code Monkeys. And when they made mistakes, he'd beat us to death with Billy Gates' spectacle case.

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          • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

            Vi? Vi? Vi was for wimps! It showed you your code all the time! ED and EDLIN had to be told to show us what we had typed! And if you didn't, then you just hoped what you typed would affect the right line(s)... :sigh: Gawd, was I ever happy when I found BRIEF ("The Programmers Editor") - I still wish for the windowing features it had in VS nowadays!

            Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #33

            Ah Griff in his Brief days ... oh!, no, not going there. I used a great editor on TI Minis back in the day which I used for so long, I still not only remember all the commands, but sometimes find myself trying to use them. not sure whether it was a great editor, or I'm going senile.

            MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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            • S Simon ORiordan from UK

              Teeth? We used to dream of having teeth. They gave a pound of Tofu every month, and that was between seven of us! We had to suck it off the boss's doormats before letting out the Tartary Apes he used as Code Monkeys. And when they made mistakes, he'd beat us to death with Billy Gates' spectacle case.

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #34

              I say "teeth"! A pound of tofu! We 'ad three ounces of spit between all 47 of us.

              Simon O'Riordan from UK wrote:

              Tartary Apes he used as Code Monkeys

              Aye, well we 'ad access to an encyclopaedia and knew you meant Barbary apes. Barbary apes!? You were lucky ! our boss 'ad an infinite number of pygmy marmoset monkeys [^] typin' out the complete lyrics of On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at[^] and when they made a mistake, he'd tell us off.

              MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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              • L Lost User

                I say "teeth"! A pound of tofu! We 'ad three ounces of spit between all 47 of us.

                Simon O'Riordan from UK wrote:

                Tartary Apes he used as Code Monkeys

                Aye, well we 'ad access to an encyclopaedia and knew you meant Barbary apes. Barbary apes!? You were lucky ! our boss 'ad an infinite number of pygmy marmoset monkeys [^] typin' out the complete lyrics of On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at[^] and when they made a mistake, he'd tell us off.

                MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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                S Offline
                Simon ORiordan from UK
                wrote on last edited by
                #35

                Right. It wa' Tartary Apes because th' boss were as thick as shit. :-D If we tried to correct him, it were t' workhouse! At Facebook! Young Tim Lee brought in his encyclopedia and boss made him eat it! Afterwards he could only talk in 'Markup', which 'boss patented and turned to 'nternet. And you tell youngsters today?

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                • S Simon ORiordan from UK

                  Right. It wa' Tartary Apes because th' boss were as thick as shit. :-D If we tried to correct him, it were t' workhouse! At Facebook! Young Tim Lee brought in his encyclopedia and boss made him eat it! Afterwards he could only talk in 'Markup', which 'boss patented and turned to 'nternet. And you tell youngsters today?

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #36

                  They'll not believe you. :) Ending the evening with a smile on my dial - thanks buddy!

                  MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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                  • J Joel Palmer 0

                    Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                    Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

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                    Adam Tibi
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #37

                    Microsoft target consumers, for the MSDN Premium, are corporates and mid-size companies, not individual freelance developers. I am a consultant and I have been issued an MSDN Premium in every corporate I worked for...

                    Make it simple, as simple as possible, but not simpler.

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                    • J Joel Palmer 0

                      Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                      Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

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                      Septimus Hedgehog
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #38

                      Joel, I used to have a company-sponsored MSDN subscription which cost me something like £800 as a salary sacrifice and the company picked up the rest of the cost which at the time was something like £6000 here in the UK. It gave me 10 licence codes for each of just about all MS' products and they were perpetual licence codes which have served me well the last four years and still do. I also had 24hr support which was really worth having; it was nice to fire a vexing problem at MS and let them sit with it on a four hour response time. On one support call to do with a printer device driver we were developing they sent one of the R&D team from their UK head office to our office to see at first hand what we were trying to do. They punted it States-side and two days later we got a very detailed answer of the best way to solve the problem and they gave a sample project to prove the concept worked. It cost a lot of money initially but I got to keep the licence codes when I left the company and we got complete satisfaction from MS. To some folks in the lounge that would seem at odds with how MS do things. For me, it was really good value for money, still is, and for once, I got more bang for my buck from MS than I dared to expect. :) Nothing I write though is in opposition to Bill Woodruff's comments.

                      If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

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                      • J Joel Palmer 0

                        Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                        Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

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                        E Offline
                        englebart
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #39

                        1. Have the customers provide the licenses for the particular versions they want. You need this on Excel 97? You have to provide me a license/copy of Excel 97. The following will not work if you have to integrate with a live, running instance of Excel. If you just need to generate files, they will work fine for batch or service based processing. 2. Consider using old, but stable formats that have been supported on all Excel versions. SYLK, DIF, CSV, etc. Many of these formats would work with the Win 2.1 versions of Excel all of the way to the most current. 3. OpenOffice + Java API will produce compatible documents and save you $5000. I doubt this would support back to 97, though.

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                        • J Joel Palmer 0

                          Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                          Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          John D Sanders
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #40

                          While I agree that MS has lost touch with its developers and has for quite some time IMO. I will say that they have made it pretty easy to get their products for free as a partner or ISV. So yes MS has alienated their developer base, I am working hard to get away from the MS stack, and yes the pricing is crazy but they have tried to create incentives like BizSpark. Anyway just my 1.5 cents worth lost the rest. JD

                          Thanks JD http://www.seitmc.com/seitmcWP

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                          • J Joel Palmer 0

                            Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                            Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

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                            R Offline
                            RefugeeFromSlashDot
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #41

                            I'm aware of a company that has > 10,000 MSDN licenses that last year downgraded everyone from Premium to Pro level subscriptions due to the cost of those licenses.

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                            • J Joel Palmer 0

                              Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                              Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

                              J Offline
                              J Offline
                              Jim McCool
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #42

                              It boils down to business philosophy. Your point about the company depending on developers providing lots of apps is valid. Traditionally MS has been eager to encourage developers. Recent management has been more interested in bottom line and paying out dividends. When short term goals like revenue become more important than long term growth, this is what you get. From a pure revenue perspective, there is a 'sweet spot' in the demand/price curve. Everyone knows that when price is low, sales go up. High prices yield fewer sales. Revenue is the product of sales and revenue; there is an ideal price at which the sales * price product is maximized. This price change may be an attempt to find that sweet spot.

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                              • J Joel Palmer 0

                                Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                                Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

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                                R Offline
                                RafagaX
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #43

                                Unfortunately you're right, MSDN is insanely pricey these days, but you may want to look at Bizpark, it may be worth.

                                CEO at: - Rafaga Systems - Para Facturas - Modern Components for the moment...

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                                • J Joel Palmer 0

                                  Has any looked at the MSDN pricing lately? I do some MS Office (excel) integration for my customers so it requires that I get their version of MS Office (all the versions; 97 to 2013) to program against. To have access to Office I need to upgrade from the MSDN Pro to MSDN Premium... which costs $5000 more! Can anyone explain to me how they can justify charging developers $5000 to integrate with their products? I'm not writing the president's speeches using these installs. I'm writing software so my customers will continue to use MS products and purchase licenses. :(( I don't understand. What am I missing... besides the money to do it? :((

                                  Joel Palmer Data Integration Engineer

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                                  K Offline
                                  Kirk Wood
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #44

                                  This is like any other business (or should be). And if you treat it as such, then the cost will actually increase your profit. Successful businesses charge a margin above their costs. Your costs have increased by $5000, so you increase the charge accordingly.

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