Couldn't agree more with ed here.

I recently had the opportunity to do some .net work and it wasn't that
difficult once you found a source to answer a few questions and pinter.com
has a nice book on vfp to .net, but as ed said, most of the people I've seen
doing it don't have a combined 1 year experience between all of them and
when you mention things like a switch or whatever, they look at you like
you're from china or india and speaking of india or china, have you ever
looked at the billed rates on some of those short term project boards
(forget the name of them at the moment), but we're talking a few dollars per
hour.

But the biggest thing that bothers me with .net is that it is more about
learning their framework then it is about developing solutions, which is
fine, but what happens when their next whizbang widget generator framework
comes out?

Based on some of the things I've read here, if I can ever get enough work
going to allow me to focus, I'm seriously thinking about the dabo/python
stuff that ed has been talking about and now that oracle has bought out sun,
I see mysql cost's going way up to support his yachting habit, slowly at
first but dramatically later on.


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Ed Leafe
Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2010 8:18 AM
To: ProFox Email List
Subject: Re: Looking for VFP Work/NYC Metro Area

On Feb 26, 2010, at 5:57 PM, Kurt Wendt wrote:

> The truth if - in the NYC Metro area - it seems that VFP type positions 
> have dwindled greatly over the past 10 years or so. Now to the point 
> that I almost never see any - although some are in the areas of Conn & 
> NJ. I live on LI - and I work in Manhattan - although I wouldn't mind 
> traveling to NJ or CT on a part time basis or as a consultant.

        And that's not going to change, so I see two choices for you here:
hope that you manage to land a long-term gig maintaining an existing Fox
app, or add a new tool (or tools) to your toolbox. And before anyone thinks
that this is going to turn into a plug for Dabo, it isn't: I think that the
number of desktop app positions in general is plummeting, so your best bet
is to learn how to create web apps. 

        In the web app arena, there are two main choices: stick with the
Microsoft family of products, or learn "something else". If you stick with
Microsoft products, you'll probably feel more at home initially, as
everything is done with the sort of visual tools you're used to working
with. You'll also be competing for work with a bunch of young
whippersnappers who'll work for next to nothing, since that's the skillset
they bring to the job.

        I would recommend one of the Python web frameworks as an
alternative. Look for jobs that want Django or Pylons or Web2Py experience
to see what the demand is; LinkedIn and the Python Jobs Board
(http://www.python.org/community/jobs/) are good places to start. Start
playing with them to find which ones are easier to grasp, and to get a
general feel for the approach to developing web apps. 


-- Ed Leafe




[excessive quoting removed by server]

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