Mono and dotGnu: What's the Point?
joeykiller writes "The Register features an opinion by Neil Davidson, asking 'Mono and dotGnu: What's the point?' Some of the points he raises may seem irrelevant for open source supporters (like why make a C# compiler while Microsoft's is free anyway), but others are thought provoking and maybe a little bit controversial. You may not agree with his opinions, but it's an interesting read anyway."
Right after we see the releases of Duke Nukem Forever and Doom III.
I thought it was supposed to be a GNU, not a YAK.
Putting the romance back into necromancer.
I've never had ANY technology have that kind of impact on my development before, unless it was the reverse (making me 3 times LESS productive)
:)
You're talking about slashdot right?
" Mono and
It's right ^ there.
--Stephen
Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
Somebody mod this guy down, he doesn't know what he is talking about. ;)
- I like pudding.
If you were reading Slashdot last night, or used IRC, you'd know the answer to this
"None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
All declarative languages are fundamentally equal, just the syntax is different.
Many of C# extra "features" are unnecessary "syntactic sugar",
There was a decent "article" a few days ago that linked an "interview" with the head of the C# group who "talked" about some interesting things and "addressed" a few of the "syntatic sugar" discussions. It also addresses why a number of decisions were "made" contrary to the way Java does things and why those Java "things" were considered "bad".
I'd like to see some "information" on what you think are "superfluous and harmful" in C#.
Yeah, this guy doesn't know Spanish. Allow me:
True story.
Herpes is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
I am not condemning Java in any way, I'm not zealoting for .NET in any way, so why the hell are people assuming I am?
You must be new here. Welcome to Slashdot.
Why would anyone run highly inneficient code written in anything but tightly written assembly code?
Discuss amongst yourselves