My wife and I are starting a Design/Development company and I started looking into buisiness costs. I start thinking of what I need for a company and I come across MSDN Subscriptions.
Here is what it seems to offer:
I've seen prices as low as 1800 for the full non-student package. Even at 2,700 this seems to be extremely worth it for developers who don't own Visual Studio, SQL Server 2000, MS Office 2003 (I'm still running off of 2000), etc.
Any downsides to this? If you have it subscribed for a year, and VS.Net 2005 comes out, do you get that as well?
I'm curious to hear from any current subscribers. It seems like an awesome deal to take up once every year or 3.
I was sweating my startup costs at having to get VS 2003 and upgrade to 2005 - or just waiting for 2005, SQL Server 2000 and a few other odds n ends. This seems like it would kill 3 birds with one stone as well as a few squirls, rabbits and even a llama!
Is there a reason NOT to do this? Just for VS.Net 2005, SQL Server 2000 (maybe 2005 will be out soon?) a few operating systems and having things sent to you on DVD seems more than worth it.
Here is what it seems to offer:
- VS.Net Enterprise Architect 2003
- Visual Studio 6 Enterprise
- Visual Studio Tools for Office
- Windows 2000 Professional/Server/Advanced Server
- XP Home/Professional
- Server 2003
- SQL Server 2000
- A bunch of other server things (BizTalk, Exchange server, commerce server, etc)
- MS Office Pro Enterprise 2003
- Visio
- Project
- MapPoint
I've seen prices as low as 1800 for the full non-student package. Even at 2,700 this seems to be extremely worth it for developers who don't own Visual Studio, SQL Server 2000, MS Office 2003 (I'm still running off of 2000), etc.
Any downsides to this? If you have it subscribed for a year, and VS.Net 2005 comes out, do you get that as well?
I'm curious to hear from any current subscribers. It seems like an awesome deal to take up once every year or 3.
I was sweating my startup costs at having to get VS 2003 and upgrade to 2005 - or just waiting for 2005, SQL Server 2000 and a few other odds n ends. This seems like it would kill 3 birds with one stone as well as a few squirls, rabbits and even a llama!
Is there a reason NOT to do this? Just for VS.Net 2005, SQL Server 2000 (maybe 2005 will be out soon?) a few operating systems and having things sent to you on DVD seems more than worth it.