Ok You really need to separate this question out into two.
1. What version of Visual Studio (2205 or 2008) should we use for MOSS development? 2. What source control system should we use for MOSS development? Answers 1. Unfortunately there is no template support from MS (At the moment) for MOSS in Visual Studio 2008. The current "WSS extensions for Visual Studio 2005", as they state, are specifically for Visual Studio 2005. http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=19F21E5E-B715-4F0C-B959-8C6DCBDC1057&displaylang=en http://forums.microsoft.com/MSDN/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=2473445&SiteID=1 I understand that MS is looking into this at the moment. This means it is a little harder to create webparts and deployment projects for MOSS when using 2008. But not impossible. There are also a number of tools that are currently filling this gap. One, I am using, is SmartTemplates (http://www.codeplex.com/smarttemplates). It works seamlessly for simple scenarios. It is also fairly easy to extend for more advance scenarios. So I would say "Yes" move over to 2008. The new feature provided outweigh the minor problems you may have integrating it with MOSS. 2. This is really not a question about MOSS. Source control is a decision an organization should make across the board. It is not affected by what technology your projects are based on. My recommendation (based on the source control systems I have used). VSS Don't use VSS. It is old clunky and a simply pain in the butt. TFS TFS is good. Still has a few wrinkles to iron out but for a large enterprise it is a good fit. Features like workitems, bug tracking, integration with MS Project and MS outlook, and many free addins available make it a great tool. SVN Source control and nothing else. It can integrate with both VS 2005 and VS 2008 or be controlled externally of the dev environment. Great at what it does but has none of the advanced features of TFS. It has no work items, no office integration, no bug tracking. So this is better for smaller teams. The other option – TFS with SVNBridge MS has recently release a new project called SVNBridge (http://www.codeplex.com/SvnBridge). This allows you to use SVN tools like TortoiseSVN and VisualSVN to talk to TFS. What this means is that instead of using the Source control binding built into VisualStudio you use SVN style integration. This gets rid of many of the bugs and problems that people have with the Visual Studio bindings. I would recommend this option. Note: you can still use all of the advanced features of TFS though VS.net I will leave it to other people to comment on other source control systems. ------------------------------------------------------------------- OzMOSS.com - to unsubscribe from this list, send a message back to the list with 'unsubscribe' as the subject. Powered by mailenable.com - List managed by www.readify.net
