:-)

On Nov 29, 12:33 pm, Lorin Rivers <[email protected]> wrote:
> The good news is that the guy who hired ME picked web2py in the first place…
>
> On Nov 29, 2010, at 13:51 , mdipierro wrote:
>
>
>
> > Some political considerations (which may be wrong and off topic and
> > improper)...
>
> > Here is a problem with external consultants. They make more per hours
> > than the average employees. They get hired because of their specific
> > expertise to tell you what the boss wants to say but he prefers
> > somebody else to say (so he does not take the responsibility for
> > saying it).
>
> > You cannot win this argument on technical merits. I would dismiss this
> > argument and point to Google as a scalability example and it is not
> > written in .net. I would address the real concern... you push web2py
> > therefore you are a single point of failure. If you leave who takes
> > care of this software? Not a problem with .net, they can always hire a
> > consultant.
>
> > I would stress that using web2py is good for rapid prototyping and it
> > will allow the company to have a test product much sooner than
> > with .net and at much lower cost. Once the prototype is built you will
> > be in a better situation to assess whether web2py or .net is the best
> > tool for the job. If you start developing in .net you will have higher
> > startup costs and limited flexibility to change the specs. web2py code
> > is much more compact and readable than .net code and it will be easier
> > to train other people to work with it and learn how it works than
> > with .net. Tell them experts4solutions.com can sell them long term
> > support contracts and code review.
>
> > The scalability bottle neck is the database. Offer something to the
> > consultant. .net uses mssql. If he claims mssql scales well for your
> > case, web2py will use mssql.
>
> > If mssql does not scale well with web2py you have other options and do
> > not need to rewrite code.
>
> > You can always reuse most of the design (html, js, css, images).
>
> > Management costs. I am sure you can make the case it costs less to run
> > linux vps than windows ones (although I have no experience with the
> > latter).
>
> > Massimo
>
> --
> Lorin Rivers
> Mosasaur: Killer Technical Marketing <http://www.mosasaur.com>
> <mailto:[email protected]>
> 512/203.3198 (m)

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