On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 11:00 AM, Ed Leafe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Jun 2, 2008, at 11:55 AM, David Crooks wrote: > > > I agree and since I work at MSFT shop that choice is .NET. > > > Exactly. If you've made the choice to limit yourself to Microsoft, > then the only way to go is .Net.
-------------------------------------------------------------- If the shop decided to go with M$ and .NET then you have to vast tools that are part of the Visual Studio 200? at your finger tips. You can scale from webservice data access for your web and window form based interfaces. You have a vast set of resources from just starting videos to advance blogs by real hard core developers. There is also the foundation of a forward thinking R&D group that keeps expanding what the Visual Studio can and will do, so you can always keep abreast with changing technology. Throw in the fact that it is in use world wide with hundreds of thousands of developers crossing all sorts of language boundaries as well as skill levels. M$ tends to keep even with respect to the mega changes today so AJAX was implemented quickly and then there were not only M$ new controls to work with, but third party ones as well. All of this is just way to limiting. Damn them. I can't debug xaml on a mac, oh what was I thinking? yes I can. :) -- Stephen Russell Sr. Production Systems Programmer Mimeo.com Memphis TN 901.246-0159 --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts --- multipart/alternative text/plain (text body -- kept) text/html --- _______________________________________________ Post Messages to: [email protected] Subscription Maintenance: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profox OT-free version of this list: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profoxtech Searchable Archive: http://leafe.com/archives/search/profox This message: http://leafe.com/archives/byMID/profox/[EMAIL PROTECTED] ** All postings, unless explicitly stated otherwise, are the opinions of the author, and do not constitute legal or medical advice. This statement is added to the messages for those lawyers who are too stupid to see the obvious.

