<@LENGTH STR="<@POSTARG NAME='upload'>">

Bill

William M. Conlon, P.E., Ph.D.
To the Point
2330 Bryant Street
Palo Alto, CA 94301
   vox:  650.327.2175 (direct)
   fax:  650.329.8335
mobile:  650.906.9929
e-mail:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   web:  http://www.tothept.com


On Apr 26, 2007, at 9:12 PM, Brian Mowers wrote:

Does anyone know of a reliable way to get the file size of a file just uploaded into Witango? I have used the TFilelen.DLL from T3-4 days in the past but it seems not to work on my new W2003 R2 File Server.
Tried RegSvr32.exe but it would not recognize the TFilelen.DLL
Can this be done with a batch file, ala Dir /B or some such?

Can someone write a quick DLL to get the size of a target file?
Just looking for ideas.

Thanks,
Brian Mowers
T2000K,etc



At 02:19 PM 4/13/2007, you wrote:
However you can also look at it from a different angle, you spent 25,000 on software 7-8 years ago. If you can spend 12,000 to upgrade and get another 7-8 years out of it, the investment is pretty good.

Even at 25k for the 8 years you've had the software, that's a pretty good return on your investment in my eyes. There hasn't been much in the way of software that would show an ROI close to that.

Especially when you factor in the investment in experience and training to use the software.

Steve Smith

Oakbridge Information Solutions
Oakville Office:         (416) 628-0793
Cambridge Office:   (519) 489-0142
Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: www.oakbridge.ca

Certified DayLite Elite Partner
FileMaker Solutions Alliance Member


On 13-Apr-07, at 11:52 AM, WebDude wrote:

Robert,

I cannot disagree with you and I do realize that this has nothing to do with Wi, but after purchasing a license for 25,000+ and then having that company abandon it less then a year later leaves a bitter taste in your mouth. I would love to upgrade, but money has been tight. I show that to get the 3 licenses following their upgrade path would cost 3596 per. No where have I ever seen nor was told I could get all 3 licenses for this price. The Dev studio would be 599. I see that as 11,387 to upgrade. Now not counting the
licenses purchased way back to the Everyware days, I see the total
investment costing over 36,387. Now you gotta admit, that is a chunk of
change.


-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Shubert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2007 9:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Witango-Talk: Question...

My understanding was that the unlimited enterprise/corporate license of 2000/4 was upgraded to 3 professional licenses of Witango. That allows for robust installations on 3 large scale servers. Granted it won't support a dozen machines like it used to, but you should still be able to get similar
overall performance considering today's multicore servers.

I would open a discussion with WT and see what is available to you. They obviously want to sell licenses and do work with people who are scaling up or down and who are moving up from 2000/4 after all this time. You will have
some option available to you.

That said, you do need to keep in mind that giving your money to Everyware or Pervasive did nothing to help WT along. They didn't get any of that cash and what was spent on development of the software seems to have not been spent wisely. My point is that while you might have a memory of spending
money, WT doesn't have one of getting it.

I do hope that when version 6 is out in both Studio and Server (debugged and stable) that WT will introduce a great incentive for users of all previous versions to upgrade. I personally feel that getting out of 3.x,4 (2000),4.5 and 5.0 on all platforms would serve all the users, the community and WT
best.

Robert


-----Original Message-----
From: WebDude [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2007 7:58 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Witango-Talk: Question...

Tom,

I am in the same boat here. I have the Enterprise with unlimited
registrations too. I have never upgraded because of the cost involved to put the server on multiple machines. The Enterprise version was a big chunk of doe at the time Pervasive sold it. I was hoping for a less expensive upgrade
path, but when Pervasive's Tango bit the dust, all bets were off.


WebDude


-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Ferguson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2007 12:13 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Witango-Talk: Question...

Ok... I invested in Pervasive's Tango platform in the Enterprise edition...
unlimited registrations, etc...  And Everyware's Tango before that.

Now I don't need that particular configuration. I'm currently a small shop
with Witango as my primary platform.

I'm currently at version 4.5.

What advantages would I have if I upgraded to the current version?

Thanks!!!

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