Hello!

> My main problem is that J2EE seems to be more in demand, career wise at
the
> moment!

I'm confident this will change. The .NET environment will slowly find its
place amongst the other usefull technologies our clients have become so
found of. If you're already programming on the Microsoft platform and want
to stay on top there for atleast a couple more years, learning .NET is
essential.

With this in mind, don't push yourself to become a hardcore C# programmer,
but general knowledge and insight in the .NET framework will probably be a
move.

Personally I'm looking forward to getting more hands-on experience with the
.NET framework. I've already been reading 5 books on the subject and made
webservices (http://golf.sphereworks.dk/webservices/golf.asmx for a first
attempt) and so forth. The OO approach is really great, although this is
something I'll have to look into.

Designing API has become much easier, but with the OO language comes
design-considerations that I have to learn. Instead of programming 'Classes
of functions' with COM, it's much more natural to do an OO model with C#.

--
Venlig hilsen / with regards
Anders Lundholm (senior developer)
Boje & Mobeck A/S

E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: http://www.boje-mobeck.dk


---
You are currently subscribed to activeserverpages as: [email protected]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to