Hi Karol, Yes, you are very right about that. Part of what I see as a problem with the .Net apps we've been building is that we have to then move our customers over to Microsoft servers, or run apps on multiple servers if they're already on *nix.
I also think that .Net is quite a good framework, and capable of wonderful things. The problem that I see is the culture that surrounds it. There is very little community, and people seem to be protective of their knowledge instead of open with it. Thanks Karol! Dan Karol Grecki wrote: > > Roger, > > You didn't say what you're building. You should always use the best tool > for the job. > You also need to take other people skills into consideration. Don't push > PHP if all your developers are proficient in .NET and don't know or like > PHP. > > The answer to you question will greatly depend who you ask, so I recommend > using google and do some research on your own. You should easily find > enough proof for PHP superiority ;) > > Cheers > Karol Grecki > > > > rogeson wrote: >> >> This is of course a no-brainer to me, but my current task is to convince >> the company I work for to build our next product using the Zend Framework >> instead of .Net, and there are a lot of .Net enthusiasts here. >> >> Does anybody have any good arguments as to how and why using PHP and the >> Zend Framework is a superior choice to .Net? Has anybody had convince >> their organization of the same sort of thing? >> >> Thanks! >> >> Roger >> > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/.Net-or-Zend-Framework--tf4580976s16154.html#a13077480 Sent from the Zend Framework mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
