Does .NET awe the non-.NETers?
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I must be getting old, As I still can't think of a way of a small guy like me capitalizing on .NET. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
Warning Link to the minion's animation, do not use. It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
Do you do web development? (that sounds so dirty. :~) Someone round here said about two years ago now that working with ASP.NET is like fitting bra's to supermodels... I was they were right, and I haven't got any cuts on my finger tips from beating my keyboard to a bloody pulp. Clients like quick, functional and reusable solutions, and ASP.NET lets you cut that better than a hot knife through butter.
David Wulff
"i said no to noddy like 20 times but in the end i just couldnt say no to him anymore" - Wishful Thinking
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.S.Rod. wrote: You have to order the CD though. Need I say more? I rest my case. What Joe Average user is going to bother with the SP? They buy the OS expecting it to be finished.
"If you just say porn then you get all manner of chaff and low grade stuff."
- Paul Watson, Lounge 25 Mar 03
"But a fresh install - it's like having clean sheets"
- C. Maunder Lounge 3 Mar '03
Jonathan 'nonny' Newman Homepage [www.nonny.com] [^]
Just take a look at Windows NT 4.0 it took at the services packs Microsoft need to get NT a stable product: SP1,SP2,SP3,SP4,SP5,SP6,SP6a. And might I add, when they finally achieved a stable product they started making obsolete. XP will take a least 4 Service Packs before it's really stable, that thru the eyes of somebody who has been using Windows since Windows 3.0! X|
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I have been coding in .Net for about a year. First of all I must say I miss C++. I do find .Net to be a lot better for creating web based applications. Things do fit a lot better. ASP .Net is a huge change from the crap they had before. Have no clue about VB .Net and I hope this trend continues. C# is fun to use, but does not compare to C++ (Just my opnion). What sort of bothers me is the .Net Framework and the fact that it needs to be installed on any machine that will use apps built in .Net. This is OK for web based apps. But why would I ever build a windows app using .Net. That would be like doing it in VB and shipping 20MB of DLLs.
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There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
Nishant S wrote: There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? What are you, out of your freakin mind? I am not awed by .NET. I'm afraid for my own value as a C++ programmer because techie-wannabe managers see ".NET", and think the world revolves around everything that Micrsoft might care to give birth to through it's corporate bunghole, thus forcing the next illogical mental half-step that somehow gels into the thought that all future programs written for Windows must a) be somehow connected to the internet, and b) must be saddled with the same over-sized putrid runtime crap-ware that VB programmers have been forced to deal with for the last 10 fuckin years. .NET is just more monopoly-enforcing bullshit from Microsoft. ------- signature starts "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001 Please review the Legal Disclaimer in my bio. ------- signature ends
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There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
right now, .Net is completely meaningless unless you're writing web apps. i have no fear. -c
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There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
I have already shifted to .NET. But certainly its not late already to shift to .NET. And I see there is more to come out of .NET, maybe in another two rleases atleast. And as many said here, .NET is not yet matured enough to be used to develop games, core applications. But as far as business applications are considered [thats what I develop], its the best tool you can use for fast and easy development. And with customers not bothered about a framework installation, its absolutely the right choice. Smitha It is better to be hated for what you are than to be loved for what you are not. -- Andre Gide
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Nishant S wrote: now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET What 'whole world'? Nobody but Microsoft and their trade partners use .NET. It probably will eventually be adopted by many, but for now it's a rather blase non-event. It has great promise, but very little substance, and few are embracing it as tightly as M$ would like. When venture capital was plentiful, vaporware was a salable commodity, but now that the well has dried up people are looking hard at the bottom line, and .NET doesn't contribute to it in any significant way. There's no rush to adopt it, and no technical reason yet to push it - that will come, but it isn't yet time. It is said that 'if you build a better mousetrap, people will beat a path to your door.' Not true these days, but rather 'if you build a better mousetrap, people will keep an eye on it, but will keep on using what has worked for years until you show them a definite benefit to changing to the new model.' I expect .NET to stagnate while M$ works out the bugs for a couple of years, and discovers a few of the serendipitous benefits that it may offer. Only then will it prosper, and in the meantime those of us that deliver solid products built with tried and true tools will prosper. "Please don't put cigarette butts in the urinal. It makes them soggy and hard to light" - Sign in a Bullhead City, AZ Restroom
Roger Wright wrote: ... will keep on using what has worked for years until you show them a definite benefit to changing to the new model. BRAVO !!!!! "You can say that again." -- Dept. of Redundancy Dept.
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Nishant S wrote: do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete There are still COBOL programmers around. Chris thinks we should all be using FORTRAN. ;) For me it is like this; For web development ASP.NET is an absolute no brainer. It has tangible benefits that even business men can understand. For the rest of the IT industry the benefits are nowhere near as tangible as that.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaMacbeth muttered: I am in blood / Stepped in so far, that should I wade no more, / Returning were as tedious as go o'er Shog9: Paul "The human happy pill" Watson
Paul Watson wrote: Chris thinks we should all be using FORTRAN. Chris is a clear thinker! And I like the little cards with holes in them, too.:-D "Please don't put cigarette butts in the urinal. It makes them soggy and hard to light" - Sign in a Bullhead City, AZ Restroom
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Michael Dunn wrote: Now the VS.NET IDE, that's evil. :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: I don't want to start a big war here but I definitely think the VS.NET IDE is a LOT better than the old IDE (somewhat slower on low-spec machines but blazingly fast on a dual 2.4GHz :P ). There are a LOT of reasons I feel it's better but the main reason being: CTRL-SHIFT-R & CTRL-SHIFT-P If you haven't used this then you're really missing out on one of the most useful features of the new IDE. It saves me TONS of time.
Reinout Hillmann wrote: blazingly fast on a dual 2.4GHz Okay .. you just wanted to brag didnt you ... admit it , come on admit it Reinout Hillmann wrote: CTRL-SHIFT-R & CTRL-SHIFT-P For those of us without the new IDE, what do these do that they are so useful ?
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I have been coding in .Net for about a year. First of all I must say I miss C++. I do find .Net to be a lot better for creating web based applications. Things do fit a lot better. ASP .Net is a huge change from the crap they had before. Have no clue about VB .Net and I hope this trend continues. C# is fun to use, but does not compare to C++ (Just my opnion). What sort of bothers me is the .Net Framework and the fact that it needs to be installed on any machine that will use apps built in .Net. This is OK for web based apps. But why would I ever build a windows app using .Net. That would be like doing it in VB and shipping 20MB of DLLs.
Ranjan Banerji wrote: What sort of bothers me is the .Net Framework and the fact that it needs to be installed on any machine that will use apps built in .Net Wait for .NET 1.1 release. Then the versioning hell starts... X| Backwards Breaking Changes from version 1.0 to 1.1[^] Don't :beer: and drive.
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There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
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There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
.NET == .Yawn... If it had come 10+ years ago it might have been interesting, but now it is just ho-hum IMHO. And if I do have to learn it, it's a couple weeks (if that) of ramp up, not some hugely revolutionary thing to grasp. ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)!
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Michael Dunn wrote: Now the VS.NET IDE, that's evil. :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: I don't want to start a big war here but I definitely think the VS.NET IDE is a LOT better than the old IDE (somewhat slower on low-spec machines but blazingly fast on a dual 2.4GHz :P ). There are a LOT of reasons I feel it's better but the main reason being: CTRL-SHIFT-R & CTRL-SHIFT-P If you haven't used this then you're really missing out on one of the most useful features of the new IDE. It saves me TONS of time.
Reinout Hillmann wrote: I definitely think the VS.NET IDE is a LOT better than the old IDE i hate the new IDE. -c
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Nishant S wrote: But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? :wtf: "Shock and Awe" :omg: Don't :beer: and drive.
:laugh: MS is trying to scare us into submission? :-D -- Tune your mind, reach inside, peel away Touch, Taste, Feel, Saturation
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Michael Dunn wrote: Now the VS.NET IDE, that's evil. :wtf: :wtf: :wtf: I don't want to start a big war here but I definitely think the VS.NET IDE is a LOT better than the old IDE (somewhat slower on low-spec machines but blazingly fast on a dual 2.4GHz :P ). There are a LOT of reasons I feel it's better but the main reason being: CTRL-SHIFT-R & CTRL-SHIFT-P If you haven't used this then you're really missing out on one of the most useful features of the new IDE. It saves me TONS of time.
Reinout Hillmann wrote: CTRL-SHIFT-R & CTRL-SHIFT-P If you haven't used this then you're really missing out on one of the most useful features of the new IDE. It saves me TONS of time. In VC6, these are used to Record and Playback the Quick Macro. What do they do in VS.NET? Regards, Alvaro
When birds fly in the right formation, they need only exert half the effort. Even in nature, teamwork results in collective laziness. -- despair.com
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Nishant S wrote: But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? A lot so-called news sites are doing a lot of MS PR because MS pays well, so may be it's just about us thinking that everything is about .NET. Which is wrong. In fact, MS is using .NET as a sexy title to make sure enterprises upgrade their hardware and software every year, even without a cause. They are basically doing business, but this does a lot harm to other small software companies. The other thing is about the control on APIs. MFC/ATL/WTL/STL/... are out-of-control since we have the source code. But .NET is on the MS side, and every time they decide to make breaking changes, you have to cope with it. The trouble is MS only supports the latest release (let me guess how little time it takes before MS decides that VS.NET 2002 is now unsupported), while us small software companies are expected to support both versions.
.S.Rod. wrote: The other thing is about the control on APIs. MFC/ATL/WTL/STL/... are out-of-control since we have the source code. We may have the source to MFC but you can't really fix anything to it. And even if you did dig in and "fix" it, could you build a DLL that worked? There are no build scripts for it, and I suspect if you did get a DLL built it would be illegal to re-distribute right? Too bad, cause then MFC could have gotten fixed instead of remaing such a mess. ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)!
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Au contraire! (your French lesson for the day :)) I don't view .NET as evil or any incarnation thereof. It's simply a case of it not being the right tool for the work I do. I'm gonna say what I always do - just because VC 7 comes out with all the whiz-bang whammy-dyne .NET features, it doesn't mean VC 6 suddenly stops working and I can no longer code in it. For work[^] download size is a huge concern, and right now we're converting our UI from MFC to WTL (yes, at my suggestion) to get our EXE size down. .NET is right out since our users will probably not have the .NET Framework yet and it is unacceptable to make them download it. Now the VS.NET IDE, that's evil. ;) Nishant S wrote: do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Again, why should I? There will always be a need for small apps where requiring the .NET Framework* is unacceptable, either because of the download size (telling modem users that they need to do a 20 MB download is not a good way to win customers), or the developers just don't know the .NET classes yet. From what I've seen, .NET's big strengths are in how it makes code operate transparently a) between languages and b) over the network.** That's all well and good, but I have no interest in those areas. *shrug* I just don't. If there was a job opening for an app that was not using C++ and all network-based and whatnot, I wouldn't go for it in the first place, .NET or no .NET. As for GUIs, you have to learn a whole new class library and do all sorts of conversions just to call APIs. If you're coming from VB where it's all forms-based and all you know how to do is click-drag-drop onto forms, and let the wizard write the handlers for you, then cool. Not for me though. For all the talk about VB being RAD and whatnot, I still have no trouble mocking up GUIs quickly in good ol' C++. In fact, I'm doing it right now at work. Why should I the time to learn the .NET GUI classes? (That's not rhetorical, if you can explain why I should, go right ahead.) IMO, the big strike against GUIs is that when major additions are made to the Windows API, you can't just grab the PSDK and use the new headers. You have to either go through the headers, look for new APIs and structs, and translate them by hand into .NET types, or hope that someone else will do it for you. I can just grab the PSDK
First of all Mike, very well written post! But I've just gone through all the replies I've got and am puzzled by two points. (1) Everyone seems to think that taking up .NET means having to abandon your old MFC/ATL stuff. (2) Most people also equate .NET coding with C# and/or VB.NET If you are thinking of (2) well then for almost all purposes you are essentially giving up on your unmanaged native stuff. But if you use MC++/IJW/CCW etc... then you won't have to abandon your existing applications and libraries. I should know what I am talking about here because right now I am co-authoring a book with Tom Archer and the whole purpose of the book is to demonstrate how it's possible to embrace .NET without abandoning your existing MFC/ATL/SDK stuff. MS aren't total fools. MC++ is there for a reason and the reason is simple. It's C++ for one thing (whatever people like CG say) and for another it lets you mix unmanaged code with managed code. Anyway from the rating my post got I can assume that the vast majority of people here see .NET in a bad light. I wonder where MS marketed this thing wrong! Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
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There are several of you who shun .NET like it was the devil herself. Mike Dunn and Colino come to mind. Initially it might have been okay. But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]
Nishant S wrote: But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? I do a lot of work where efficiency and performance counts so I believe .NET is no threat to me. However, if they got rid of the virtual machine and had templates I would be interested in writing code for C#. John
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Nishant S wrote: But now when the whole world seems to be looming with .NET do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? :wtf: "Shock and Awe" :omg: Don't :beer: and drive.
Kant wrote: "Shock and Awe" :laugh::laugh::laugh:
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Au contraire! (your French lesson for the day :)) I don't view .NET as evil or any incarnation thereof. It's simply a case of it not being the right tool for the work I do. I'm gonna say what I always do - just because VC 7 comes out with all the whiz-bang whammy-dyne .NET features, it doesn't mean VC 6 suddenly stops working and I can no longer code in it. For work[^] download size is a huge concern, and right now we're converting our UI from MFC to WTL (yes, at my suggestion) to get our EXE size down. .NET is right out since our users will probably not have the .NET Framework yet and it is unacceptable to make them download it. Now the VS.NET IDE, that's evil. ;) Nishant S wrote: do you guys feel afraid? That you will soon become - er - obsolete? Again, why should I? There will always be a need for small apps where requiring the .NET Framework* is unacceptable, either because of the download size (telling modem users that they need to do a 20 MB download is not a good way to win customers), or the developers just don't know the .NET classes yet. From what I've seen, .NET's big strengths are in how it makes code operate transparently a) between languages and b) over the network.** That's all well and good, but I have no interest in those areas. *shrug* I just don't. If there was a job opening for an app that was not using C++ and all network-based and whatnot, I wouldn't go for it in the first place, .NET or no .NET. As for GUIs, you have to learn a whole new class library and do all sorts of conversions just to call APIs. If you're coming from VB where it's all forms-based and all you know how to do is click-drag-drop onto forms, and let the wizard write the handlers for you, then cool. Not for me though. For all the talk about VB being RAD and whatnot, I still have no trouble mocking up GUIs quickly in good ol' C++. In fact, I'm doing it right now at work. Why should I the time to learn the .NET GUI classes? (That's not rhetorical, if you can explain why I should, go right ahead.) IMO, the big strike against GUIs is that when major additions are made to the Windows API, you can't just grab the PSDK and use the new headers. You have to either go through the headers, look for new APIs and structs, and translate them by hand into .NET types, or hope that someone else will do it for you. I can just grab the PSDK
Your points about exe size are rather interesting. Yes, the 20 MB download is large, but that's only a one-time* thing. However, the applications written for the .NET framework are vastly smaller than they would be if they were written in plain C++/Win32. Here, we have several C# apps (UIs, services) that weigh in at less an 90K. Many of them are less than 40K. This is a distinct advantage if you are concerned about the size of your exes. * Yes, I know that one-time isn't exactly true, what with the updates MS will release. "Yeah, and I invented the spellchecker" - fellow inventor Dan Quayle on hearing that Al Gore invented the Internet.