Guest Stever Posted May 28, 2002 Posted May 28, 2002 I need to upgrade my computer soon and by next summer I plan to go to Visual Basic.Net. I am seeing though, that VB.Net will not work on any system older than 2000, as I am using 98 2nd Edition. What's worse, it looks as though I will have to use the expensive version of XP, called XP Professional. Is this so? Next, the only version of VB.Net that I have seen in the stores is the Standard version for $100. There is an upgrade from VB 6.0 to VB.Net for about $600 and the Suite is around $1300. I presently am using VB 6.0 Enterprise Edition. Is there a comparison? I hate upgrades, $1200-1300 is too much money and the Standard is probably watered-down to much. Any suggestions? I am really fighting this thing since the upgrades to both my computer and VB are going to cost several thousand dollars that I really cannot spare. It's a shame Microsoft couldn't, for once, place its customers first instead of their own greed. Quote
*Gurus* Thinker Posted May 28, 2002 *Gurus* Posted May 28, 2002 It also runs on NT4/Win2K. One of these O/S should be able to run on a computer that can run Win98se (possibly need more memory). The upgrade prices are actually better than when I upgraded from VS5 to VS6. Quote Posting Guidelines
*Gurus* divil Posted May 28, 2002 *Gurus* Posted May 28, 2002 It should also run on XP home edition just fine. I'm not sure what more you hoped to get by posting on this board, there is a lot of content devoted to discussing the differences (pricing and functionality) between the available versions on the microsoft website. Quote MVP, Visual Developer - .NET Now you see why evil will always triumph - because good is dumb. My free .NET Windows Forms Controls and Articles
*Gurus* Thinker Posted May 28, 2002 *Gurus* Posted May 28, 2002 However divil, XP home is no more likely to run on a pre-2000 made computer than XP Pro. Quote Posting Guidelines
Guest Stever Posted May 28, 2002 Posted May 28, 2002 Allow me to clarify my original question since there seems to be a difference in interruptions. When I said "upgrade" I actually meant that I was going to have an entirely new machine built. With the newly built machine, will VB.Net run on the standard home edition of XP or not? Obviously a "probably will run" is not good enough, since that is nothing more than a guess. I am looking to build the new machine for my home, not work, therefore I did NOT want to have to purchase a business version of XP (XP Professional) if in fact, XP Home Edition works just fine. This would save $100 or more. Next, I posted my concerns here since each place I have visited on the internet has "reviews" with comparisons to VB 6.0. They do NOT answer the questions or concerns that I have posted here. So please bear with me instead of being somewhat impolite. I am not made of money and will not have a company buying these for me. The mortgage comes first! Quote
*Gurus* Thinker Posted May 28, 2002 *Gurus* Posted May 28, 2002 I see nothing wrong with your questions, and thanks for clearing up the confusion I had about your original question. Sounds like XP Home and the Pro version of VB.Net would be fine for you. Quote Posting Guidelines
Guest epanther Posted May 28, 2002 Posted May 28, 2002 I am using the VB.Net standard($100) on my machine which has the XP Home version of the OS. You also mentioned being worried about the standard version being watered down. Not having the whole Studio package obviously means I'm missing the other languages, but the VB seems complete and I can create EXE files, unlike a learning version. Although I've recently bought this version, the only barrier I've had so far is that I can't upgrade my projects from previous versions, which you can with the more expensive packages. And maybe there is some download some place that would help me with that too. Quote
Guest TheIrishCoder Posted May 28, 2002 Posted May 28, 2002 It's worth noting also that IIS does not come with XP Home edition. This would mean you could not do any asp.net stuff but I have come across some solutions to getting IIS running on the home edition. If you want to create asp.net applications using vb.net then you will have to have IIS. Quote
Guest Stever Posted May 28, 2002 Posted May 28, 2002 VB.Net & Visual.Net Link To see what the differences are between VB.Net and Visual.Net versions of VB, follow this link. http://msdn.microsoft.com/vbasic/howtobuy/choosing.asp Also, the prices are staggering. Of course, thoughs whose company is purchasing these items, aren't going to be concerned. But consider this; Visual Studio.net - Enterprise Architect $2,500 Visual Studio.net - Enterprise Developer $1,800 Visual Studio.net - Professional $1,100 Visual Basic.net stand-alone - $100 Which versions from above are you guys using? Quote
*Gurus* Thinker Posted May 28, 2002 *Gurus* Posted May 28, 2002 Visual Studio.net - Enterprise Developer $1,800 Well, after I get my $300 rebate for getting it on DVD, my MSDN Universal Subscription will cost $1725. That includes an incredible amount of stuff, not just vs.net, but all O/S and Office products up to the Developer's edition and SQL Server 2000 developers. It is such a good deal, I can't hardly believe it. Of course, it is an upgrade price because I am already a registered VS6 enterprise user. Quote Posting Guidelines
Guest josuff247 Posted May 30, 2002 Posted May 30, 2002 I went to EDU.com Got Visual Studio.net professional full version for $95! They also sell Win xp proffesional for about $95. ANd have other awesome software deals. Only catch, you have to be a student, so if you are one, or if you know one, this might be your best bet. I am not sure of the licence rules, so I am not promoting anything illegal. You might need to be a student for the licence o be valid. Quote
Dodgeram01 Posted June 2, 2002 Posted June 2, 2002 I'm running Visual Studio .NET Professional Edition on Windows XP Home. It installed fine, and has run fine for me. Quote Dodge Grab Life By The Horns
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