Stephen – funny how some people can’t tell when you’re joking. (Katherine?)

 

Perhaps the demise of .NET is as wrong as the common rumour mill predicting
the sinking fortunes of Microsoft? 

 

The Business Insider website report borrows from another (Longboard) which
predicted
<http://www.businessinsider.com.au/presentation-why-teslas-the-next-apple-20
13-4#forget-the-bears--tesla-will-be-trading-at-200share-in-5-years-1>
earlier this year that Tesla - the electric vehicle manufacturer ’s  stock
price would reach $200 (it was then around $US55, now
<http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/q?s=TSLA>  $US170) and that it would become
“the new Apple”. Longboard was not so far off – and the stock reached
$US194, rising from $US27 in 12 months.

 

ASSET MANAGER: In Five Years Microsoft Will Be The Market's Most Valuable
Company

[link
<http://www.businessinsider.com.au/longboard-microsoft-slide-deck-2013-10> ]

 

Microsoft makes quite a bit of money each quarter. 

  _____  

Ian Thomas
Victoria Park, Western Australia

 

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com]
On Behalf Of Stephen Price
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2013 11:42 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Visual Studio 2013 and setup projects

 

I was joking. Or was I? How fast did Silverlight shrivel up and die? You
could almost wonder if it was murdered, rather than died. Dying, one could
argue is the slow natural decay of something. Murder is sudden and
pre-planned. 

Sorry it's not even Friday yet and I did not use a smiley. 

 

Regarding installers, considering most .Net apps can be deployed via xcopy,
why is it so hard to create an installer project, I wonder? 

 

On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 11:23 PM, Katherine Moss <katherine.m...@gordon.edu>
wrote:

Okay, two things.  How can .NET be dead if we still have ASP.net web sites
being built daily?  And secondly, you’re grandly missing something.  You
forget that WiX is open source, and that there are nice editors for it right
there on CodePlex and source forge.  Try WixEdit or ISWiX.  They don’t have
all of the eatures, though both are open source, so all of the developers
here could take time to less-complicate things a bit in their spare time if
they felt like it.  I’d definitely do it if I had more time and if my
development in C# and others was stronger.  

 

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com]
On Behalf Of Stephen Price
Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2013 8:34 AM


To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Visual Studio 2013 and setup projects

 

It's simple. .Net is dead. 

 

Long live the web!

 

On Tue, Oct 22, 2013 at 8:24 PM, Greg Keogh <g...@mira.net> wrote:

There are certainly a lot of rude comments about Flexera and Microsoft’s
disregard for developers requiring install software. 

 

Indeed! I found a fair swag of angry comments from irritable and frustrated
people and journals during searches later in the day. I ran haphazard
searches for various relevant keywords and it's quite clear that something
went weirdly askew with setup projects after VS2010. You just can't get a
straight answer anywhere about why things changed in the way they did, or
where things are going. Even the "official" pronouncements are all shallow
and evasive. I'm an MSDN subscriber who tries to keep up with tech gossip in
my spare time, and even I didn't realise the vdproj was dropped last year
and here I am wondering where the hell it's all going now, and no one seems
to know.

 

I even tried to find a clear description of the features (or limitations) of
InstallShield Limited Edition without luck. All you can find in searches are
pages of marketing bullshït telling you why you should upgrade to
Professional, Ultimate or Cosmic editions.

 

I'll ask in the Wix forum what the truth is about VS2013 integration with
their releases and let you know if I find anything useful.

 

Greg K

 

 

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