but today?

At the company I'm working for right now, a whole lot of mission critical systems are still running on VB&Access and are only slowly being replaced by Java/.NET.

with kind regards,

David Linsin
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email: [email protected]
blog: http://dlinsin.blogspot.com



On Feb 20, 2009, at 1:52 AM, Casper Bang wrote:


Not sure I understand the purpose of such a revival. Ok, 10 years ago
VB6 was a very productive environment for putting together
applications in a snap, catering both to superusers (macro writers)
and programmers (Win32 API importers) but today? Let hobbyists play
with Open Office Basic, Gambas or Visual Basic .NET Express instead.
On error resume next

/Casper

On 20 Feb., 00:10, robogeek <[email protected]> wrote:
On Feb 19, 1:42 pm, Tor Norbye <[email protected]> wrote:



Releasing it is not going to be easy. There's a whole open source
review thing you've gotta go through when you open source stuff - it
took a long time for the JDK, and there's a cost to it. Plus in the VB
area there might be legal issues as well...

-- Tor

There is an obvious strategic goodness to that end goal of assisting
VB to run in the Java ecosystem.

But, I have studied that outbound open source review process quite
extensively when I was at Sun.  It is a daunting process to get stuff
to be open sourced @ Sun.  That's one of the things which make me
wonder about the seriousness with which Sun is taking 'Open Source'.
Okay so there are a lot of valid business concerns in that process
however many of the questions you have to answer in that process
strike me as holdovers from an era before Jonathan began pushing the
company into the open source world.  However the biggest cost in the
process was screening the code to ensure Sun holds rights to
everything sufficient to license under an open source license.  A
shortcut on that specific cost comes if every line of code was written
by a Sun employee as then Sun obviously has the required rights.

Legal issues ...hmm... yeah, Microsoft might have a patent or two
against VB don't'cha think?  Sigh.

- David
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