Which doesn't surprise me. .NET is Microsoft's de facto development
platform. It has many of the advantages and many of the disadvantages
of JAVA. You'd think that Microsoft had copied the idea from Sun.
John Francis wrote:
>On Sun, Oct 15, 2006 at 05:19:16PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>>In a message dated 10/15/2006 12:56:31 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
>>
>>There's no reason Ann should have .Net Framework installed. That's usually XP
>>Pro stuff, she has XP, and so she should be able to disable her logon pretty
>>easily.
>>
>>
>
>Well-meaning advice, I'm sure, but still based on a faulty premise.
>
>.NET framework comes with various things, very few of which are
>tied to XP Pro (which, unless you are on a large network, is
>pretty much indistinguishable from XP Home or XP Media Edition).
>I'm not sure now what I installed that required .NET framework
>on my (XP) notebook; I think it might have been Adobe Lightroom.
>
>
>
>
--
Things should be made as simple as possible -- but no simpler.
--Albert Einstein
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