I can't remember what issue of Dr. Dobb's Journal I read it from but it claimed that the new version of C++ will support programming for practically all operating systems to include MAC, Linux, etc... Is that true? I am still researching on it but coming up empty handed...
Visual Studio .NET 2005 has just shipped! Before installing the official new version you will have to uninstall the old version. Check out Aaron Stebner's instruction on how to uninstall the beta versions from your machine.
I would also recommend you take a look at some of the new features implemented into the debugger by blogging to Mike Stall's.
Also you might want to read about upgrading your ASP.NET 1.x to ASP.NET 2.0.
Today I can proudly say I am just another .NET Engineer who have decided to become a member of the Community Server group. I installed their product on my server (WebHost4Life).
I am very excited with .NET's future versions C# 2.0 and C# 3.0. I have began using VS.NET 2005 for awhile now and I am truly hooked on its IDE. I have notice though that a lot of my clients are not going jump into implementing its use because they are scared of upgrading their existing code from version 1.1 to 2.0 even if a wizard was available.
What can I do to persuade them?
What does a project manger or a project lead like to hear?
- Performance boost?
- Scalability?
- Reusability?
Well these questions are going to remain open until I actually experience the release version of the product on 11.07.2005...