hiya, If you were planning a project that would take approx 6 months, would you ditch v1.1 and use whidbey and sqlServer 2005 I'm hoping for a unanimous yes ;-)
cheers James, I appreciate the honest comments.I am quite wary of the lack of "official" support for the beta. (a copy is winging its way to me as I speak :-) ) The project as such is still very much at a discussion stage.But I think that in the meantime I will:
1) keep developing in 2003 2) do some toy apps with beta 2 (when I receive the software) 3) keep reading up on the potential whidbey implications.
For anyone that's interested here's a wee link that talks about the golive license: http://blogs.msdn.com/release_team/archive/2005/04/18/Go_Live.aspx
Okay that is not very helpful. The yes depends on if you have to deploy into a real live environment how big your user base is Can you make sure you meet the go live licence agreement What type of project is it Do you have the time to relearn the components that are new (i.e how tight is your deadline) If you can start in Whidbey it should be touch wood out at the end of the year, but you might have to rewrite some of your code because some becomes obosolete or changes between beta 2 and Production Release .
if you had a 6 month project...
Jim Svoboda
I appreciate the honest comments.I am quite wary of the lack of "official" support for the beta.
(a copy is winging its way to me as I speak :-) )
The project as such is still very much at a discussion stage.But I think that in the meantime I will:
1) keep developing in 2003
2) do some toy apps with beta 2 (when I receive the software)
3) keep reading up on the potential whidbey implications.
For anyone that's interested
here's a wee link that talks about the golive license:
http://blogs.msdn.com/release_team/archive/2005/04/18/Go_Live.aspx
cheers,
yogi
Ripster
;-)
Okay that is not very helpful. The yes depends on if you have to deploy into a real live environment how big your user base is Can you make sure you meet the go live licence agreement What type of project is it Do you have the time to relearn the components that are new (i.e how tight is your deadline) If you can start in Whidbey it should be touch wood out at the end of the year, but you might have to rewrite some of your code because some becomes obosolete or changes between beta 2 and Production Release .
HTHS
James
DecentViv