ardnermail wrote:
Di lab-komputer SK sudah dimulai pelatihan Visual Basic 2005 yang
diadakan secara teratur dan sudah berjalan dua pertemuan. Trainernya
adalah asisten lab-SK.
Namun demi perkembangan Sistem Komputer kedepan kami sebagai asisten
lab ingin masukan-masukan dari para alumni dalam hal pelatihan VB ini.
Mungkin sumbangan saran Sylabus seperti hal-hal apa saja yang wajib
diajarkan atau sistem administrasi pada pelatihan tersebut.
Dalam waktu dekat akan kami usahakan pelatihan Java. untuk pelatihan
Hardware (micro, plc, dll) kami sedang mencari trainer untuk
mengadakan pelatihan tersebut.
demikian kami sampaikan.
Terima kasih.
Hanya kasih komntar sedikit dan jangan jadi patah semangat untuk
belajar. Selama masih mau belajar ya bagus lah.
di ambil dari http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_basic cuplikannya ada
di bawah..
Artinya VB 6.0 sudah gak di support dari maret 2005 kemudian di
perpanjang sampai maret 2008.[1]
Artinya lagi kalau sudah gak di support kemungkinan yang anda pelajari
akan kurang dipakai.
Kok bisa kurang di pakai ?,
kemungkinan program yang anda buat akan mentok hanya di pakai sampai
windows XP yang support resminya hanya sampi April 2009 [2]
Artinya lagi winXP kemungkinan akan di tinggalkan orang seperti 98,
2000.
Itu hanya sebagai gambaran aja. Gak usah di pikirin gw juga masih pake
win98 heheheh.
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[1]
Timeline of Visual Basic (VB1 to VB6)
- Project 'Thunder' was initiated
- Visual Basic 1.0 (May 1991) was released for Windows at the Comdex/Windows
World trade show in Atlanta, Georgia.
- Visual Basic 1.0 for DOS was released in September 1992.
The language itself was not quite compatible with Visual Basic for
Windows, as it was actually the next version of Microsoft's DOS-based
BASIC compilers, QuickBASIC and BASIC
Professional Development System. The interface was textual, using extended ASCII characters to simulate the
appearance of a GUI.
- Visual Basic 2.0 was released in November 1992.
The programming environment was easier to use, and its speed was
improved. Notably, forms became instantiable objects, thus laying the
foundational concepts of class modules as were later offered in VB4.
- Visual Basic 3.0 was released in the summer of 1993 and
came in Standard and Professional versions. VB3 included version 1.1 of
the Microsoft Jet Database Engine
that could read and write Jet (or Access) 1.x databases.
- Visual Basic 4.0 (August 1995) was
the first version that could create 32-bit
as well as 16-bit
Windows programs. It also introduced the ability to write non-GUI
classes in Visual Basic.
- With version 5.0 (February 1997),
Microsoft released Visual Basic exclusively for 32-bit
versions of Windows. Programmers who preferred to write 16-bit programs
were able to import programs written in Visual Basic 4.0 to Visual
Basic 5.0, and Visual Basic 5.0 programs can easily be converted with
Visual Basic 4.0. Visual Basic 5.0 also introduced the ability to
create custom user controls, as well as the ability to compile to
native Windows executable code, speeding up calculation-intensive code
execution.
- Visual Basic 6.0 (Mid 1998)
improved in a number of areas, including the ability to create
web-based applications. VB6 is currently scheduled to enter Microsoft's
"non-supported phase" starting March 2008.
- Mainstream Support for Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 ended on March 31,
2005.
Extended support will end in March 2008.[5]
In response, the Visual Basic user community expressed its grave
concern and lobbied users to sign a petition to keep the product alive.[6]
Microsoft has so far refused to change their position on the matter.
Ironically, around this time, it was exposed that Microsoft's new
anti-spyware offering, Microsoft AntiSpyware (part of the GIANT Company Software purchase),
was coded in Visual Basic 6.0.[7]
Windows Defender Beta 2 was rewritten as C++/CLI code.[8]
It is difficult to tell what impact this decision will have on any
future offerings of Microsoft if the perception is created that long
lasting applications cannot be built with Microsoft Products due to planned obsolescence.[citation needed]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_basic
[2]
Support lifecycle
Mainstream support for Windows XP Service Pack 2 will end on April 14,
2009, four
years after its general availability[35].
As per Microsoft's posted timetable, the company will stop licensing
Windows XP to OEMs and terminate retail sales of the operating system June 30,
2008, 17
months after the release of Windows Vista.[36]
On April 14, 2009, Windows XP will begin its "Extended Support"
period that will last for 5 years until April 8, 2014.[37]
First generation Windows XP (without Service Pack 2) is no longer
supported; Microsoft ended the support for Windows XP RTM
on September 30, 2004 and
Windows XP Service Pack 1 and 1a on October
10, 2006.[38]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_xp
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