Gustav Brock
Gustav at cactus.dk
Wed Feb 1 02:58:16 CST 2006
Hi all It's now out in version 5.1 with new goodies for the dot Net people: http://www.intersystems.com/cache/technology/cache51/whatsnew.html /gustav >>> Gustav Brock 14-10-2003 15:04 >>> Hi all Just had a talk with the local representative about developer's cost. Minimum is one license at EUR 240.00. Maintenance and support is optional at 22% pr. year of license fee or ~EUR 53.00 bringing a total for the first year of about EUR 293.00 which equals about USD 340.00. This may, of course, vary on the west side of the pond. If you sign an agreement as a software house you'll get a substantial discount on these prices including the licenses you may sell to your clients. To me this sounds so fair that only open source engines like Firebird, SAP DB (MaxDB) and MySQL can compete - and they'll only bring a fraction of the features of Caché. I have no time to play around with the free test license at the moment but I hope I will in the near future. /gustav > Hi Anonymous > Here a simple end user license fee is EUR 240. > However, they offer alternative pricing schemes, like > Power Units (don't ask) > Value based > These are intended for OEM and embedded use of the engine. > Further, due to the diverted use of the engine, pricing should be > negotiable. This you will, of course, have to discuss with your local > contact. > How or if this covers a developer license for commercial use, I don't > know yet. > /gustav >> Anyone know the pricing? The site requires you to fill out a survey to >> get pricing ... If the price isn't on the site, for anything, it's >> ususally way too expensive. >> -----Original Message----- >> From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com >> [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Gustav Brock >> Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2003 11:58 AM >> To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving >> Cc: accessdb2web at egroups.com >> Subject: Re: [AccessD] InterSystems Caché database engine >> Hi group >> Well, today I went to this hands-on seminar, and I'm impressed. >> The core of the engine is an object oriented data store. You create as >> easy as in Access - in a very nice designer using a basic like language >> - classes for storing data. When compiled, these classes are at once >> compiled too - and represented - as tables via ODBC and JDBC, classes >> via C++, Java, ActiveX (COM), .net and XML, and you can access the data >> simultaneous via all interfaces. These layers are all highly efficient >> they claim is the main reason for the high speed of the engine next to >> the speed of the engine itself. >> Further, you can create CSP pages similar to ASP and JSP pages with a >> direct connection to the engine. An add-in for Dreamweaver is offered >> with wizards for creating web pages. These pages are interesting as they >> offer live update of presented data via either a server call or a hidden >> frame meaning that requery or repaint of the displayed page is avoided - >> this is in my opinion mandatory for anything serious application-like >> running in a browser. >> The best perspective of this, in my eyes, is that you can start using >> the engine and your proven tools whatever they might be (Access) while >> moving to or adding other interfaces like another language, a browser >> interface, XML or web services (SOAP). Rome was not built in one day, >> remember. >> The engine scales to shadowed servers, clusters and TB size with no more >> efforts than within reach of a developer (we are impatient and really >> have no time for this, you know), and it runs on close to anything >> including WinNT/200x/XP, Redhat/Suse Linux, Solaris, OpenVMS, Tru64, >> HP-UX, AIX, and Win ME/98 - even Win95 - and MacOX with the next release >> - requiring modest hardware only. >> /gustav >>>> Just noticed this option for a free developer license: >>>> http://www.intersystems.com/downloads/index.html >>>> Anyone having experience with this engine as a backend for Access or >>>> otherwise? >>>> The free license doesn't allow you to sell your apps. It is, however, >>>> not time limited.