On 17/05/07, M Harris
On Thursday 17 May 2007 03:05, Benji Weber wrote:
Some, uh, interoperability type stuff... I don't know, like C# stuff, or .NET stuff, or....... other M$ patented stuff....
... but I could be wrong.
Lots of applications are written in c#.net , beagle, banshee for example. You are removing an entire development platform. uh, yeah...
"C#'s principal designer and lead architect at Microsoft is Anders Hejlsberg. His previous experience in programming language and framework design (Visual J++, Borland Delphi, Turbo Pascal) can be readily seen in the syntax of the C# language, as well as throughout the Common Language Runtime (CLR) core. In interviews and technical papers he has stated ***flaws*** in most major programming languages, C++, Java, Delphi, Smalltalk, drove the fundamentals of the CLR, which, in turn, drove the design of the C# programming language itself."
Anders Hejlsberg is one of the most respected software engineers in the world, who has proven himself many times. Forgive me if I don't have the same respect for your uninformed gibberish.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_Sharp
Beagle?
Beagle is actually quite useful and relatively efficient compared to other indexing engines. Any indexing engine will slow your machine down while it is running, that is a choice up to the individual user.
Banshee? <remove>
I don't use it either, but there are an increasing number of applications built on mono.
Micro$oft's .NET initiative is e v i l . (like most every other lockin they've invented)
mono is a free portable implementation of the .net standard, so claiming it is microsoft lockin is rather silly. c# & .net core are EMCA standards, and a patent licence is granted to any implementors. The mono project will remove or work around any patent encumbered code.
Since Micro$oft has not detailed the supposed patent infringements they claim to have against linux... do you suppose that some of those will have anything whatever to do with the .NET initiative... or the M$ development of C#?
Ps. The language of *nix is C/C++. The connectivity of *nix is ip sockets.
c/c++ is still widely used, but the future is managed code - java/.net. The corporate world has already embraced it. Managed code is safer, less error prone, and can be faster. Just because Microsoft creates something doesn't make it bad. Microsoft Research in particular puts out a lot of interesting stuff.
Pss. The lockin of M$ is IP.
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