Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Is foxpro dead?
Message
From
03/02/2010 16:21:27
 
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01438742
Message ID:
01447360
Views:
108
So, your "break-even" success depends upon selling five projects which has not happened yet?

I sincerely hope you are able to do so and then some. I know, all too well, what it's like being in your shoes.

>If we succeeded using VFP before, how much more today. We have a deep understanding of the business process and the technology available to deliver the requirements. Failure is not an option for us here.
>
>All we need is to have 5 projects sold to cover two years development cost with 2 cents change.
>
>>So two years with five developers, so far. In the US, that translates to roughly 1,000,000.00 USD (one miliion) and you are not done yet. From my experience with projects like this, it will probably take "at least" another year (another $500,000.00 USD). Am I right?
>>
>>Will your $net increase be more than your $dev costs over the next few years?
>>
>>I am asking this because I have seen a lot of projects like this fail due to lack of analysis
>>
>>>>Was it hard to migrate VFP app to C#?
>>>
>>>Marat,
>>>
>>>It depends on your outlook as a person and as a developer. But technically, it's not hard. You only have to start the migration correctly. In our case, it took us two years to migrate the whole solution and there are still portions which are yet to be completed. But the solution is totally huge : Patient Management, Materials Management, Financial Management, HR, LIS, RIS, Health Insurance Management, EMR, and Clinic System. I have with me 5 full-time developers. It's worth the effort and very satisfying. It gives us some sort of peace of mind because C# is becoming a language of the masses which translates to popularity even more than VB. To me, C# is the way to go for VFPers. It's killing 3 birds in one stone - Learn New Language, Next-of-Kin to Java, Futuristic...
- Jeff
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform