Are there any advantages to staying with .net 1.1?
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I saw one for at least 5 years .NET. At the time, it implied people who had been working on .NET back in '99. :doh:
"Je pense, donc je mange." - Rene Descartes 1689 - Just before his mother put his tea on the table. Shameless Plug - Distributed Database Transactions in .NET using COM+
Technically that is possible - although it was NGWS in 1999 - but obviously there would be very, very few people who would have that amount of experience and they probably wanted to pay the standard rate that any Win dev would get. Tom Archer (blog) Program Manager MSDN Online (Windows Vista and Visual C++) MICROSOFT
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Technically that is possible - although it was NGWS in 1999 - but obviously there would be very, very few people who would have that amount of experience and they probably wanted to pay the standard rate that any Win dev would get. Tom Archer (blog) Program Manager MSDN Online (Windows Vista and Visual C++) MICROSOFT
Yeah, I was going to say, that's really just a group of people at Microsoft and some outside people they brought in for the really early previews of ASP+ and NGWS. Jeez that seems like it was a long time ago.
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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Technically that is possible - although it was NGWS in 1999 - but obviously there would be very, very few people who would have that amount of experience and they probably wanted to pay the standard rate that any Win dev would get. Tom Archer (blog) Program Manager MSDN Online (Windows Vista and Visual C++) MICROSOFT
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Hi, Now that the development tools for .net 2 have gone gold, how long can we expect it to take until users have the .net runtime installed on their machines? I'm developing an app in C# and I would really like the type-safe containers and the layout managers for Windows Forms that I hear about (I haven't tried anything of VS 2005 yet), but I'm a little hesitant because I do want users to be able to run my programs easily (that is, I hope that some/most of them already have the .net 2 runtime); which is also the reason why it took me until now before I wrote my first .net (1.1) program. How do you all think about that? Is there anyone out there who isn't planning on switching to .net 2 because of compatibility concerns? When can we expect the .net 2 runtime to show up on Windows Update? cheers, roel
We still have the luxury of being two years from release, but we made the decision to go with .NET 2.0 over a year ago. Until February, we prototyped everything in .NET 1.1. As soon as VS 2005 Beta 1 came out, we switched. It required a few changes, but was otherwise painless. (We then took six months off to churn out yet another release with our nightmarish 10 year old C/C++ code base.) I say switch. .NET 2.0 not only has a richer API, I find VS 2005 a joy to work in. Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
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Any inside info on when we'll being seeing the first version of Windows which includes the frameworks? It's great on Windows 2003 Server right now, but what about all those client PCs?
Vista will include .NET 2.0 (heck, it kinda relies on it).
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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The prodigal son returns. Where have you been Dave? :)
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
I went into the server room to configure Linux on a new machine and didn't come back out again for two months. Still isn't configured right. Why can't they standardise on something like the Management _Conf_ole? :sigh:
Ðavid Wulff Audioscrobbler :: flickr Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen (video)
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Vista will include .NET 2.0 (heck, it kinda relies on it).
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
Are you sure of that? I read in a recent MSDN article that WinFX is not installed by default in Vista Beta 1 right now. Now, that doesn't mean .NET 2.0 won't be installed, but it makes me wonder. I'd love to hear something from one of the Microsoft folks on this, hint hint.
Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Morality Apart from God Judah Himango
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Are you sure of that? I read in a recent MSDN article that WinFX is not installed by default in Vista Beta 1 right now. Now, that doesn't mean .NET 2.0 won't be installed, but it makes me wonder. I'd love to hear something from one of the Microsoft folks on this, hint hint.
Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Morality Apart from God Judah Himango
It'll be installed by default in every build from September CTP on.[^]
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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It'll be installed by default in every build from September CTP on.[^]
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
:cool:
Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Morality Apart from God Judah Himango
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We still have the luxury of being two years from release, but we made the decision to go with .NET 2.0 over a year ago. Until February, we prototyped everything in .NET 1.1. As soon as VS 2005 Beta 1 came out, we switched. It required a few changes, but was otherwise painless. (We then took six months off to churn out yet another release with our nightmarish 10 year old C/C++ code base.) I say switch. .NET 2.0 not only has a richer API, I find VS 2005 a joy to work in. Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
Same situation with us: we started with a .NET 1.0 codebase, then 1.1, and when 2.0 beta 1 was released, we decided to go with it. Right now I'm very happy with that decision because of all the code & time saved via generics, anonymous methods, and iterators. Plus the new menu strips, table layout controls, splitters, and other controls that are really a must-have. I find VS 2005 better than 2003 as well; it seems the forms designer still has an occassional bug where it can't display a form unless you restart VS or delete the bin/obj folders. But hey, it's better than VS 2003's "The Woe" bug. :-p
Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Morality Apart from God Judah Himango
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Do you know if those people really had valid copies of Windows?
Ðavid Wulff Audioscrobbler :: flickr Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen (video)
David Wulff wrote:
Do you know if those people really had valid copies of Windows?
No, I admit I don't. And on further research, I find that it's been updated and improved, so it is working properly now.
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Technically that is possible - although it was NGWS in 1999 - but obviously there would be very, very few people who would have that amount of experience and they probably wanted to pay the standard rate that any Win dev would get. Tom Archer (blog) Program Manager MSDN Online (Windows Vista and Visual C++) MICROSOFT
Yeh, I know, but what they were willing to pay was not in the salary range for someone with that exposure. Basically, the agent, who has not real idea was looking for a .NET guy, in the way he would look for a Java guy with 5 years experience. They just did not know the framework and languages had not been out that long, and by what they were asking implied a lot more about where that person had worked. i.e. an MS insider who had worked on the .NET project.
"Je pense, donc je mange." - Rene Descartes 1689 - Just before his mother put his tea on the table. Shameless Plug - Distributed Database Transactions in .NET using COM+