Tina Norris Fields
tinanfields at torchlake.com
Mon Sep 24 10:43:59 CDT 2012
Yeah, that was what turned me away from even considering it. I am still on their email list, though. Offers keep coming in. But, oh those prices! T Tina Norris Fields tinanfields at torchlake.com 231-322-2787 On 9/24/2012 6:37 AM, Gustav Brock wrote: > Hi Arthur > > But at USD 349 + 499 + 499 => ouch!? > > /gustav > > >>>> fuller.artful at gmail.com 24-09-12 11:56 >>> > First of all, I haven't switched so much as opened a new avenue. I still do > occasional work in Access, almost always against a SQL BE. But I am very > much intrerested in Alpha Five, for these reasons: > > -- It offers a whole bunch of web-dev tools, and integrates with Ajax, > Javascript, HTML5. ASP.NET, PHP and most anything I can think of. > -- It hasn't abandoned the desktop model. At the start of any given > project, you can choose to target Desktop or Web; Halfway into a project, > you can change horses, as it were. > -- There are abundant wizards to perform common tasks; the abundance and > power of these make the Access wizards pale in comparison. > -- The programming language, Xbasic, is similar to Access VBA but much more > powerful. It also offers true object orientation. > -- There is a collection of Feature Packs, available at extra cost, which > provide additional capabilities. One such is dedicated to Graphics and > Charting. There are many more, some created by Alpha and some by third > parties. Alpha gets behind any creators of Feature Packs. > -- There are dozens of example programs and video tutorials. In this > respect, Alpha leaves Access in the dust. > -- Whenevr I've asked for help, I have received a response the same day, > and sometimes within the hour. > -- Once you're ready to turn pro (I'm not there quite yet), Alpha offers a > subscription plan that gives you not only updates but any new Feature Pack > that may be introduced (not including the third party packs, of course, > just the ones created by Alpha). > -- Alpha Five has its own data-file format, but the company is well aware > that it's going up against Access, and for that reason its next two back > ends are Access and SQL Server. Beyond that, it can connect to virtually > anything that supports ODBC. Further, you can change back-ends very easily. > > Not all is a bed of roses. There are a couple of down sides: > -- To run a web app requires the Alpha application server, which means that > you'll need an additional license enabling you to install the app server on > your client's machine. The fee is well within reason, and it allows you to > install the server on multiple client locations. But it is a cost to factor > in. (The product includes a copy of the app server, so you can develop and > test your app, but subsequent client installations require the license.) > -- Despite the similarity of programming language, a lot of the event names > are slightly different -- it's still pretty obvious which Alpha events > correspond to which Access events, but it is a consideration. > -- The largest problem is that the web-app server runs only on Windows. So > other approaches (say, PHP and/or Javascript + jQuery) may be your only > avenue, should you need your app to run on a Linux server. > > That's a quick summary of my impressions thus far. You can always visit the > site (www.alphasoftware.com) and read more about it, and download a trial > version if so inclined. > > On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 9:10 PM, Tony Septav <TSeptav at uniserve.com> wrote: > >> Hey Arthur >> >> Tell us why you have switched to Alpha Five (or whatever it is called). >> And >> the benefits you see in using this program. >> >> >> >> Thanks >> >> >> >> Tony Septav >> >> Nanaimo, BC >> >> Canada >> -- > Arthur > >