Express versions will be $49 a piece when they come out. The exception is SQL Server 2005 Express which is free.
You do not technically need Visual Studio to develop using.NET.
Check out SharpDevelop. It's features include: "Write C#, ASP.NET, ADO.NET, XML, HTML code" and: "C# to VB.NET converter, as well as VB.NET to C# converter" which Visual Studio does not have (unless they added it in 2005 and nobody told me).
Yep, Here you go...
The question is, of course, how was anyone able to keep their Windows 9x computer running for more than a few days at a time anyways?
You can check out DVDs, VHS tapes, Cassettes and CDs right? How about commercial music? They would, of course, be DRMed to expire after 2 weeks or whatever.
OK... that comes out to $1600/yr per computer for a business... how much is the storage?
What about security?
And also why not "follow the power analogy entirely" and charge based on computer power/hr?
It's too expensive... rather than pay $1000-$2000 every 2 years, will businesses pay $3200... why?
The file name, size and created date lead me to believe it is SQL Server 2000...
Express versions will be $49 a piece when they come out. The exception is SQL Server 2005 Express which is free. .NET.
You do not technically need Visual Studio to develop using
Check out SharpDevelop. It's features include: "Write C#, ASP.NET, ADO.NET, XML, HTML code" and: "C# to VB.NET converter, as well as VB.NET to C# converter" which Visual Studio does not have (unless they added it in 2005 and nobody told me).
The .NET Framework is free: http://msdn.microsoft.com/netframework/downloads/u pdates/
:-)
Visual Studio 2005 and SQL Server 2005 Developers Edition have been on Usenet for the past 6 hours now...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_forgot_Poland "You forgot Poland"
I went to the "Breakout Session" for IIS7 yesterday and the guy was using IISCMD.exe to configure it. I am not sure how robust it is, however.
I, for one, welcome our new red space neighbor overlords!
Yep, Here you go...
The question is, of course, how was anyone able to keep their Windows 9x computer running for more than a few days at a time anyways?
I think Jesus held prior art to that idea long before Ghandi... Too bad he did not patent it.
You can check out DVDs, VHS tapes, Cassettes and CDs right? How about commercial music? They would, of course, be DRMed to expire after 2 weeks or whatever.
OK... that comes out to $1600/yr per computer for a business... how much is the storage?
What about security?
And also why not "follow the power analogy entirely" and charge based on computer power/hr?
It's too expensive... rather than pay $1000-$2000 every 2 years, will businesses pay $3200... why?
You forgot:
Step 5: Profit!!!