In this case, I'm guessing AngularJS 1.3 support will last for about 3 
years from now.

With the present state of front-end dev psychology, most will move onto 
AngularJS 2.0 soon after it gets released so third-party modules for 1.3 
will dwindle down and AngularJS 1.X will be a thing of the past... I would 
say this might happen within a year from now or so.

On Wednesday, October 29, 2014 2:15:28 AM UTC-7, Sander Elias wrote:
>
> Hi lak2007blr,
>
> How long do you need your project to be run? What is the estimated 
> delivery time?
>
> Angular 1.3 will get *at least 1.5 to 2 years official suppor*t after 2.0 
> is released. And as it is developed fully in the open, I suspect community 
> support will last quite a while after that.
> Do not forget, there are 1000+ people committing  to the Angular 
> repository. Only a few of those are employed by Google.
> Also, 1.3 will not stop functioning if/when the core team moves on.
>
> And no, there isn't another framework that brings the same thing to the 
> table. Nor is there another framework that promises long term support. If 
> I'm mistaken in this, I will be gladly proven wrong!
>
> Regards
> Sander
>

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