Tony,
Because, for those of you who can't break themselves away from your
existing platform(s), it will work with the one you are already using.

mv.NET definitely is more than a class library. It resides within the
.NET IDE and allows intelligent access to your multi-value data and code
from there. 

Regards, 
Mike

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tony Gravagno
Sent: Wednesday, December 29, 2004 7:36 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [U2] Where Will the .NET Apps Live ?

Hey Mike - what's with the BlueFinity label, why not just send them
here?:
http://www.jbase.com/products/mvnet.html

Now I'm confused about mv.NET.  The diagrams and details make it look
like
a class library but the text in the bluefinity website makes it look
like a
RAD environment nested within Visual Studio.  At some point there the
line
blurs between "we provide this function" and "we provide the tool that
allows you to create this function".  Can you clarify where this product
positions itself?

Oh well, we don't really get hot babes when we buy a car either.

To answer Bill's question - yes - depending on how you code it, the
back-end can be platform and technology independent of the client.

T

Mike Street mikes-at-jbase.com |U2UG| wrote:
> Check out mv.NET .....
> 
> http://www.bluefinity.com/
> 
> Regards,
> Mike
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Brutzman, Bill
> Has anybody written a compiled .Net two-tier application
> (Win-GUI, not browser) hosted on Unix box launched from a
> Win client? 
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