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Kelly

or look on your company equity and shift to SAP and don't ask me why you
have to look at the equity because everybody knows that is about what a SAP
project costs - or rather - ends ;-)

On Sat, Oct 17, 2015 at 5:28 PM, Richard Schoen <
Richard.Schoen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Sounds like .Net is the current and future state of your web development.

Better start learning .Net if you're going to participate in the web
application development process in your shop.

2 years is an eternity in IT so I am expecting you'll still be using .Net
in 2 years unless you hire a dev manager with PHP experience who says PHP
is it, or Ruby and says Ruby is it, or someone with Node.Js who says Node
and Javascript is it.

Embrace what your team is using today and continue to self-educate on the
other platforms if it interests you.

Regards,

Richard Schoen | Director of Document Management Technologies, HelpSystems
T: + 1 952-486-6802
RJS Software Systems | A Division of HelpSystems
richard.schoen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
www.rjssoftware.com
Visit me on: Twitter | LinkedIn
------------------------------

message: 3
date: Sat, 17 Oct 2015 00:09:09 +0000
from: Kelly Cookson <KCookson@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
subject: [WEB400] Holding off recommending Node.JS for now

I'm leaning more and more towards making a "wait-and-see" recommendation
about node to our shop. This isn't so much about node per se. It's more
about: (a) the circumstances in the shop where I work, and (b) Microsoft
making ASP.NET 5 open source and multi-platform.

Learning that ASP.NET 5 has become open source and multi-platform changes
my perspective entirely. My shop already has a lot of experienced .NET
developers, and we already use .NET for all of our web and mobile
development. My shop could probably afford to wait a year or two and see if
ASP.NET 5 gets ported to the IBM i. If ASP.NET 5 does get ported to PASE,
then it would make so much more sense for my shop to use ASP.NET 5 rather
than node. If ASP.NET 5 doesn't get ported to PASE, we could still use
.NET running in IIS and the .NET Provider to do all of our web and mobile
development. It wouldn't be the same path we're already on today.

Maybe in a year or two, we would be able to compare a slightly more mature
node against a slightly more mature open source ASP.NET 5 and make a
decision that's better for us than we can make today.

Kelly Cookson
IT Project Leader
Dot Foods, Inc.
1.217.773.4486 ext. 12676
kcookson@xxxxxxxxxxxx


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