100,000 posts!

Bucky

Contributor
Joined
Dec 23, 2001
Messages
791
Location
East Coast
Hey all! It looks like this forum has 1/10 of a million posts on it. Coolness.

Thought you all might want to know. Sorry, I don't have any party hats to give out.
 
thenerd said:
I'll bet the forum grows very fast once vista is released. There are lots of vb6 people ( lots ). Vista will give them more initiative to change.

Why? As far as I can see Vista won't have any real affect on the numbers using Visual Studio.net...
 
It most absolutely will! If I understand correctly, the .NET Framework 2.0 will be integrated directly into the OS. With the new command-line shell you'll even be able to execute .NET code right in the command line (unless they removed that feature as a security risk... I've heard conflicting reports). Consequently, .NET code should be running faster, and deployment will become much less of an issue.
 
Bucky said:
It most absolutely will! If I understand correctly, the .NET Framework 2.0 will be integrated directly into the OS. With the new command-line shell you'll even be able to execute .NET code right in the command line (unless they removed that feature as a security risk... I've heard conflicting reports). Consequently, .NET code should be running faster, and deployment will become much less of an issue.

oh! I wasn't aware of that. It sounds cool!
 
Vista will probably end up removing the compile from command feature. 2.0 framework I forget will or will not work with Visual Studio 2003? In any case im upgrading to 2005 :P

Ahh schools back in that means more clients :p
 
With all this talk of Vista, can someone explain what indigo is? Is it the new programming framework, like .net to XP?
 
Bucky said:
It most absolutely will! If I understand correctly, the .NET Framework 2.0 will be integrated directly into the OS. With the new command-line shell you'll even be able to execute .NET code right in the command line (unless they removed that feature as a security risk... I've heard conflicting reports). Consequently, .NET code should be running faster, and deployment will become much less of an issue.
Right. You also forgot to mention WinFX, the .NET replacement of Win32.
 
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