Jim Lawrence
accessd at shaw.ca
Sat Dec 8 23:57:39 CST 2012
I received the following link to a very "optimistic" estimate of Microsoft's Christmas yet to come, a future they dearly deserved. A decade of arrogance comes at a price. The Collapse Of Microsoft's Monopoly: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-consumer-compute-shift-2012- 12 Jim -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Stuart McLachlan Sent: Saturday, December 08, 2012 8:53 PM To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving Subject: Re: [AccessD] Recreating an Oracle Environment - Learning Exercisebased on a production instance as a model You have to ask? It's there way of keeping everyone else to busy learning new technologies to have time to develop an competition. Let me count the technologoies tha MSFT have introduced, required developers to master and other companies to support and then dropped/moved away from.... nah, I've haven't got that many fingers and toes.. -- Stuart On 8 Dec 2012 at 22:23, Mark Simms wrote: > So this is strange: given the power of ADO, why would MSFT make a > declaration of moving away from it ? > > > > The beauty of ADO is that you can be connected to multiple data sources > > simultaneously so you can even "pump/stream" data from one set of > > tables to > > another across the network or web. > > > > > -- > AccessD mailing list > AccessD at databaseadvisors.com > http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd > Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com > -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com