# Friday, December 18, 2009
« Intellectual Property and the Internet | Main | Predictions for 2010 »

Scott Guthrie blogged that the launch date for Visual Studio and the .NET Framework will be delayed. They are delaying the release to fix some performance problems. Also according to the blog there will be a release candidate in February with

a broad “go live” license that supports production deployment

I think this is a win-win-win situation for most developers. Let me explain.

The first win is that we get a much better product. Most developers I know want to work with the latest and greatest tools. They are willing to suffer through poor performance or some bugs to be on the bleeding edge. With the extra time we won’t have to curse our tools under our breath waiting for service pack 1.

The second win is that we can actually put code into production faster. Since the RC will have a “go live” license I can deploy my applications sometime in February with the RC rather than waiting for the launch in March.

The third win that I see is that we get more say into shaping the future of the tool that most of us live in each day. Now don’t get me wrong, I don’t think that Microsoft will be slipping in new features but we have the ability to comment for a longer period and possibly influence what will go into the version of Visual Studio after this. Scott Guthrie has graciously posted his e-mail address for feedback and there is the connect site as well. I am sure that Microsoft tries to listen to feedback all of the time but human nature being what it is and scheduling and all I am sure they are more focused on gathering and prioritizing feedback during the beta cycle.

The people who stand to loose the most from this announcement are those who either by choice or company policy are not allowed to use beta software in production. Since Scott’s post states the launch will be moved back a few weeks I don’t think it will be that much longer to wait.

It is also nice to see Microsoft reacting to our feedback and changing something as public as the launch date to make sure that the product is stable and usable. I can think back not too many years when the reaction might have been very different and they would have just moved up the date for the first service pack.

Monday, December 21, 2009 7:19:41 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)
"Much better product"??? For two months I have been dealing with Microsoft and the known glitch that Visual Studio 2008 kills Winzip. Read that again please... Winzip no longer works on three of our systems after installing Visual Studio 2008. And What does MS respond to this known problem? That it is "resolved" because it will be fixed in VS2010. Uh, Hello?!?!? ITS BROKEN NOW AND WE HAVE NOT BEEN ABLE TO GET BUSINESS WORK DONE FOR ALMOST TWO MONTHS.

Now, when someone, anyone, distributes software that "breaks" other software, usually we call that a 'virus' or 'worm' and in most cases it is illegal and punishable. Of course when Microsoft does this... Aw hell, I dont know what THEY call it - improvements I guess.

The response to this problem has been TERRIBLE!!! The fix? There is none.

So... You are going to delay .NET 4 and VS2010 and this will result in a "much better product"??? Really? How about getting the damn product you send out correct so it doesnt tank our business!!! No, I guess thats too much to ask huh.

30 years in this business and for many of them, I used to trust Microsoft. Today I would trust Osama Bin Laden more than any clown from Microsoft. They produce garbage, they break other software, and their idea of "fix" is to tell us to wait and then lay down MORE money on products we cant trust?

I DONT THINK SO.

Get a damn fix out for the blunder you have already done - and then, get a clue... a "much better product" would simply be one that work and doesnt cost us the small fortune you dopes have with this latest blunder!






Andy Foreman
Comments are closed.