On May 21, 2004, at 11:11 AM, Dossy wrote:
The learning curve is a big hurdle to technology adoption.  Flattening
that curve by letting folks migrate to AOLserver while maintaining
their
current levels of productivity ... will only ease the pain of
migration.

The thing we don't tell them up front is that once they get a taste of
how much easier it is to do lots of things in Tcl, they'll never want
to
go back to their old ways.  :-)

Some comments from the web developers are actually the opposite. They were complaining that the lack of debugging tools for Tcl as compared to the suite of tools available for, say, java, make them really not want to use AOLserver.

It would be a good idea to ask this question to a larger audience, to
see where they'd like AOLserver to go.

For the record, as a sysadmin, I much prefer AOLserver to the
alternatives, because it's easier to administer by far and has a proven
stable track record.

-- Dossy
--
Michael Matthews, [EMAIL PROTECTED] | TCAFTP | AIM MikeSAFH | x50984


-- AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/

To Remove yourself from this list, simply send an email to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> with the
body of "SIGNOFF AOLSERVER" in the email message. You can leave the Subject: field of 
your email blank.

Reply via email to