Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 10th Jul 2007 22:50 UTC
Windows "Today at the Worldwide Partner Conference in San Francisco, Microsoft's chief operating officer, Kevin Turner, announced that Windows Server 2008 (previously known as Longhorn), Microsoft SQL Server 2008, and Visual Studio 2008 will be officially launched on February 27, 2008. This may come as a surprise to those following the Windows 2008 Server news closely, since most sources at Microsoft have been insisting that the next version of its server operating system will released at the very end of 2007. Apparently in Redmond there is a difference between releasing the OS and the extravagant product launches, which are more of a pep rally for the product then a technical presentation."
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RE[5]: Maybe fix some bugs...
by kaiwai on Wed 11th Jul 2007 08:23 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: Maybe fix some bugs..."
kaiwai
Member since:
2005-07-06

With so many people developing for JVM/.NET/Web 2.0(tm), I think the number of developers bound to Win32 (blech) is on a permanent decline anyway. Beyond Vista, "legacy" software will either be rewritten, die, or become transparently VM'd as you suggest.


I would wish one thing would happen in the IT world - that the bullcrap about Java, .NET and managed code, and if you're a 'real man' you use unmanaged programming languages such as C and C++.

There is a constant reputation amoungst some programmers on this website, lying time and time again. Claiming that pointers aren't available and yet, for someone like me who has a *very* basic understanding of this, I know there is references in java, and in .NET/C#, you can use a special 'safe' pointers if you need to.

The day when these 'real men don't use managed code' die off, the sooner we'll start to see companies embrace managed code as *THE* thing to do use for developing software - multiplatform applications based on platform independent frameworks.

I'd love to see, for example, people tell Adobe and Microsoft to go take a hike in favour of JavaFX which is opensource and available for all and sundry to embrace. For vendors, they need to look at the long term rather than short term.

There is a (without over exaggarating) market out there for people who don't run Windows, who would love to purchase software - if Adobe tomorrow came out with a competely Creative Suite based on the Eclipse framework, I would pay for 3 releases up front! I know many Apple Mac users who would instantly switch to a commodity PC with *NIX if they could run alll the applications.

It makes me annoyed when I see vendors blame Microsoft when in reality, it is the vendors (software and hardware) by refusing to support alternative platforms, they by default prop up Microsofts monopoly.

Reply Parent Score: 2