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  3. .Net Remoting, is it still relevant?

.Net Remoting, is it still relevant?

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  • G GKP1992

    When is the last time you worked on .Net Remoting? Potential opportunity but I don't think I'd like the work.

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Mycroft Holmes
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    The first book I got on .Net was Petzolds book on remoting, never used it and went on to simpler things.

    Never underestimate the power of human stupidity - RAH I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP

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    • G GKP1992

      When is the last time you worked on .Net Remoting? Potential opportunity but I don't think I'd like the work.

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      N Offline
      Nand32
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      (If I'm right) As part of API/Framework standardization, Soon this would be marked Obsolete & ultimately removed from the framework. Migrate or die type. :)

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      • G GKP1992

        When is the last time you worked on .Net Remoting? Potential opportunity but I don't think I'd like the work.

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        M Offline
        Matt McGuire
        wrote on last edited by
        #13

        used it for 7ish years back in the day for last company's flag ship product for communication between computers, it worked well, then WCF came out; and I believed the hype that it was so much better, and restructured the system for a big new release around WCF. In the long run it wasn't anything spectacular and I don't think it improved anything, now according to the latest news WCF will not be carried forward into Dotnet 5. before that news came out though we had already made the commitment to leave WCF and start using REST services, it was more flexible and I could tie our java products into the same calls as the .net projects with no extra work.

        raddevusR 1 Reply Last reply
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        • N Nand32

          (If I'm right) As part of API/Framework standardization, Soon this would be marked Obsolete & ultimately removed from the framework. Migrate or die type. :)

          M Offline
          M Offline
          Matt McGuire
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          MS already said the same thing about WCF not too long ago about future versions of dotnet[^]

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          • G GKP1992

            When is the last time you worked on .Net Remoting? Potential opportunity but I don't think I'd like the work.

            N Offline
            N Offline
            nightsoul94
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            I just recently left my last job, and they supported it quite heavily. The applications were extremely old. I avoided it as much as possible, but the little I did learn came down to you could replace the entire system with web services, of one flavor or another, and make life very easy. If I had to explain it to somebody who had never seen it, I would say .Net Remoting was the grandfather of web services, before anybody know what web services were. One of the many problems that we faced, in working with Remoting, was the code had been built in Visual Studio prior to 2005. That was our guess anyway. We didn't have any licenses for an IDE that would work on it, and it was next to impossible to make changes. The programs that used it were on a 6 months cycle that lasted 3 months. They ran data in March through June and then again in September through November. That left us only 3 months to rewrite everything before the software had to be ran again and it was a fairly large and complex system. In general, dealing with it sucked. I don't know the final outcome but the program was on the board for a modernization to using web services.

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            • G GKP1992

              When is the last time you worked on .Net Remoting? Potential opportunity but I don't think I'd like the work.

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              T Offline
              Thornik
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              .NET remoting is the same dead-born technology as WCF, EF, WF, you name it. Simply because MS don't have even 5 smart guys to make good, perspective product.

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              • raddevusR raddevus

                Probably not so much. Basically it was a way to implement Remote Procedure Calls (RPC) - expose functionality to other apps. Now there are other (better and simpler) ways to implement that functionality. WCF (though it was complicated at one point in history) is far more prevalent now (maybe the default for C#?) Now you can quite easily create a self-hosted app and expose functionality. (of course, security is always a challenge and a necessity). Check this out and you can get an overview of how much simpler it can be than the old days of .NET Remoting. How to: Host a WCF Service in a Managed Application | Microsoft Docs[^] Update Here are a couple of SO entries that were basically asking same question that I just found. Custom RPC vs WCF vs .NET Remoting - Stack Overflow[^] c# - Does WCF really replace .NET Remoting? - Stack Overflow[^] That last one was posted 9 years ago and even then the reply was, "remoting is old". :)

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                Thornik
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                JSON-RPC replaces them all. And it doesn't depend from MS clowns.

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                • T Thornik

                  .NET remoting is the same dead-born technology as WCF, EF, WF, you name it. Simply because MS don't have even 5 smart guys to make good, perspective product.

                  P Offline
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                  Peter Adam
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  Yes, these frameworks required architecting, and all the cool boys just wanted to sit down with something shiny new and code, so no buzz.

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                  • M Matt McGuire

                    used it for 7ish years back in the day for last company's flag ship product for communication between computers, it worked well, then WCF came out; and I believed the hype that it was so much better, and restructured the system for a big new release around WCF. In the long run it wasn't anything spectacular and I don't think it improved anything, now according to the latest news WCF will not be carried forward into Dotnet 5. before that news came out though we had already made the commitment to leave WCF and start using REST services, it was more flexible and I could tie our java products into the same calls as the .net projects with no extra work.

                    raddevusR Offline
                    raddevusR Offline
                    raddevus
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #19

                    Matt McGuire wrote:

                    we had already made the commitment to leave WCF and start using REST services, it was more flexible and I could tie our java products into the same calls as the .net projects with no extra work.

                    Yep, that's the way to go!! :thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:

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                    • M Matt McGuire

                      MS already said the same thing about WCF not too long ago about future versions of dotnet[^]

                      N Offline
                      N Offline
                      Nand32
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      :thumbsup:

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