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Bill



> >  Yup, but the real choice is for *us* in out businesses or careers.
> 
> The smart money is on diversification.
> 
> >  Stephen has hitched his horse to M$ and .NET. Technically we can  
> > argue all we want, but it is his business decision. He 
> keeps getting  
> > gigs, so it looks pretty good to me.
> 
> But he's a data ho. "Will code for food." Works for some,...
> 
> > I'm doing open source. Results?
> >  So-so at best, but it might be me.
> 
> It's all you, or Stephen or Bill. It's up to you to make the 
> business work. You choice of tools is only one small aspect 
> of your business. "It's a poor craftsman who blames his tools."
> 
> > Bill has decided to keep his horse
> >  hitched to the good ole' VFP. Good for him! Bad for his 
> customers, if  
> > he has any left.
> 
> Not so! The other, other, other half of the business is 
> maintaining a big complex, rich client app in VFP 7. It has 
> more features and more industry-specific behaviors that make 
> this the killer app in its small niche. Tens of thousands of 
> lines of code with special pricing schemes. transportation 
> costing and commission calculations. Why change? This one can 
> meet their needs for the foreseeable future. When it needs a 
> rewrite, we'll have to evaluate the lay of the land at that 
> point to decide: port, rewrite, outsource, sell out, web, 
> SOA, Dot Nyet, dabo, whatever. There is man-decades of work 
> in the current software, and years of knowledge of how the 
> business works in the head of my partner and in the heads of 
> clients. We'll find the win-win-win solution for all of us 
> when the time comes. Or maybe we'll be disintermediated by 
> some upstart with a web app. Time will tell.
> 
> > But *I* can live with that: one less viable
> >  competitor. We all believe that he lives in la-la land, 
> praying that  
> > magic fairy dust will land on VFP.
> 
> Depends on the niche, really. Until recently, a friend was 
> running a program that ran on windows in an emulator of a 
> WANG 2200A, a machine discontinued 30 years ago. It was 
> cheaper to buy an emulator than to rewite the program. Bill 
> and his customers may be in a similar niche.
> 
> >  The Market will prove out the best business strategy.
> 
> The market seems to tolerate a wide range of solutions., even 
> several norms from the mean.
> 
> >  As a number of folks have said to Bill: "Good luck with all that."
> 
> Yeah, really. We're all bozos on this bus.
> 
> -- 
> Ted Roche



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