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Netflix dropping Silverlight
Message
From
24/04/2013 14:07:51
 
 
To
24/04/2013 13:32:00
John Ryan
Captain-Cooker Appreciation Society
Taumata Whakatangi ..., New Zealand
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01571054
Message ID:
01571771
Views:
60
>>>In the business world I think .net, asp .net etc is doing pretty well ( assuming that going forward "asp .net" includes open source MVC and EF and a whole lot of javascript/jquery with HTML5)
>
>Somebody attending a cycling convention might declare that everybody likes bikes. ;-) Surely we preselect our customers and vice versa according to services we can deliver. Customers wanting Linux won't be seen by you, but Linux underpins most of the commercial websites out there though small players like Amazon, eBay, Priceline etc etc are pushing for native apps to replace the websites...


>>but Linux underpins most of the commercial websites out there
That's true, John but there is almost infinite corporate demand for ASP.NET.
That paradox will resolve itself one day I'm sure and I suspect the winner won't be ASP.NET unless things change.

I did a web site for a small company with ASP.NET.
When I tried to run it on GoDaddy the performance was abominable.
The GoDaddy tech was cooperative but honest and he advised me to redo the site so that it would run on Linux because ASP.NET used limited shared resources while the Linux service was virtually unlimited.
I did it over in vanilla HTML/CSS with Dreamweaver - it took longer to develop.. but the site ran ... like a Fox!
Large clients don't have those kind of issues - yet- but sooner or later inefficiency will surface itself and become a target.
I see things like SignalR and I wonder whether MS is taking that issue on.
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.
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