Just me or has the world gone crazy for .Net and others
- utopiomania
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I would like to try out the MS express studio .NET stuff, as another tool, but these
free versions are limited in some ways.
Can anyone with an overview tell me what these limitations are? Can you use them to
create commercial software for example.
Since I already am a registered VB4 and VB6 user, i was thinking of downloading the
express VB version.
free versions are limited in some ways.
Can anyone with an overview tell me what these limitations are? Can you use them to
create commercial software for example.
Since I already am a registered VB4 and VB6 user, i was thinking of downloading the
express VB version.
- the.weavster
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- utopiomania
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Thanks for the tips! The TurboExplorer soft is Borland, which brings back some fond
memories..
I was looking at some big yellow boxes in a store in Burnsville shopping center outside
of Minneapolis and trying to decide wether to buy Turbo-C, Turbo-Basic or Turbo-Pascal..
I ended up buying Turbo-C, because that was what Borland used to write some of the other products they marketed at that time.
I also wondered why people was staring at me the way they did, but soon learned it was
because I was smoking
indoors while trying to decide.
memories..

I was looking at some big yellow boxes in a store in Burnsville shopping center outside
of Minneapolis and trying to decide wether to buy Turbo-C, Turbo-Basic or Turbo-Pascal..
I ended up buying Turbo-C, because that was what Borland used to write some of the other products they marketed at that time.
I also wondered why people was staring at me the way they did, but soon learned it was
because I was smoking

So I can port my win32api code to .net or I can port it to linux... I think I'd have to bite the bullet and go linuxKarLKoX wrote:... and Microsoft's R&D is working on a 100 % pure OS made with .NET
Paul Dwyer
“In nature, it’s not the strongest nor the most intelligent who survives. It’s the most adaptable to change” - Charles Darwin
“If you can't explain it to a six-year old you really don't understand it yourself.” - Albert Einstein
“In nature, it’s not the strongest nor the most intelligent who survives. It’s the most adaptable to change” - Charles Darwin
“If you can't explain it to a six-year old you really don't understand it yourself.” - Albert Einstein
-
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Look at it this way :
- Mac OSX is Linux, and Apple are considering using an extended "off the shelf" distro in the future.
Embedded systems are being used everywhere that use Linux
Linux is free
Linux is becoming very easy for new-comers (ubuntu)
Windows is annoying people to no end, costing a fortune, and not going the way people would like it. Linux is driven by "the people".
Laz
Registered PureBasic user since Nov 2005
Check out FlashML at www.designrealm.co.uk... The ultimate Flash Component
Registered PureBasic user since Nov 2005
Check out FlashML at www.designrealm.co.uk... The ultimate Flash Component
:roll: And stands for democracy and freedom from oppression and defends human rights too I supposeLazarus404 wrote:Linux is driven by "the people"..
Lazarus404 wrote:...or Windows adopts Linux as a backbone, then offers .NET and Win32 capabilities as a wrapper.

Paul Dwyer
“In nature, it’s not the strongest nor the most intelligent who survives. It’s the most adaptable to change” - Charles Darwin
“If you can't explain it to a six-year old you really don't understand it yourself.” - Albert Einstein
“In nature, it’s not the strongest nor the most intelligent who survives. It’s the most adaptable to change” - Charles Darwin
“If you can't explain it to a six-year old you really don't understand it yourself.” - Albert Einstein
I don't see Windows dying any time soon, personally. Linux in the workplace would be nice but would require a much different breed of tech support than the typical MS tech support person. Even in Ubuntu you still need to drop down to the console to perform some tasks and some of those are quite complex. Microsoft has a lot of steam behind it and a lot of years of people born and bred to use it. It'd take a lot to displace them to any large degree. Just my two cents.
Back on topic - what do y'all see more in terms of .NET development? VB.NET or C#.NET ? I've always been curious whether VB is still living in these days.
Back on topic - what do y'all see more in terms of .NET development? VB.NET or C#.NET ? I've always been curious whether VB is still living in these days.
IMHO C# has gained ground on VB.NET in the last few years now more people realise that C# isn't as scary as C/++ but i would say both now are in equal usage. Take a look at this:Xombie wrote:Back on topic - what do y'all see more in terms of .NET development? VB.NET or C#.NET ? I've always been curious whether VB is still living in these days.
http://www.langpop.com/
Personally, i wish VB.NET would be taken out to the shed and put out of it's misery.

- the.weavster
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Do you really want to force millions of VB.NET programmers to adopt C#?Kale wrote:Personally, i wish VB.NET would be taken out to the shed and put out of it's misery.
VB.NET has almost everything C# has likewise, it's a great language and it shouldn't
be stopped just because you don't like it!
Windows 7 & PureBasic 4.4
It should die a slow horrible death!milan1612 wrote:Do you really want to force millions of VB.NET programmers to adopt C#?Kale wrote:Personally, i wish VB.NET would be taken out to the shed and put out of it's misery.
VB.NET has almost everything C# has likewise, it's a great language and it shouldn't
be stopped just because you don't like it!
