[dba-Tech] What Platform for Web Application?

Rocky Smolin at Beach Access Software rockysmolin at bchacc.com
Thu Jan 25 08:12:07 CST 2007


Bookmarked!  SO VB.NET is the language used by Visual Studio?

Rocky
 

-----Original Message-----
From: dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Martin Reid
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2007 3:55 AM
To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues
Subject: Re: [dba-Tech] What Platform for Web Application?

Rocky
 
Have a look at this. Its from 2003 so a little out of date with .NET 2 etc
now.
 
 
http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa192490(office.11).aspx
 
But should give you a general idea. I would also do some background work on
classes. I believe Charlotte has lots of experience in .NET stuff.
 
Martin
 
 
Martin WP Reid
Training and Assessment Unit
Riddle Hall
Belfast
 
tel: 02890 974477
 

________________________________

From: dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com on behalf of artful at rogers.com
Sent: Thu 25/01/2007 11:47
To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues
Subject: Re: [dba-Tech] What Platform for Web Application?



Yes, VS 2005 would be an excellent choice in which to recreate the Sleep
Advisor. Given its lack of db-complexity, you could have a prototype working
in a day or two.


----- Original Message ----
From: Rocky Smolin at Beach Access Software <rockysmolin at bchacc.com>
To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues
<dba-tech at databaseadvisors.com>
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2007 12:19:17 AM
Subject: [dba-Tech] What Platform for Web Application?


So I'm thinking once again about learning a web platform so I can convert
two applications and I need a little advice. 

The Sleep Advisor requires a minimum of data.  Just a few yes/no and 1-5
type responses and less than a couple hundred items, at most.  It's not even
split FE/BE.  It is an Access run-time at the moment but if it could be
converted to a web-based platform, we could charge per use on the internet,
instead of selling the program.

I have Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition which I have to try to learn.
Would this be a good platform to deploy The Sleep Advisor on the web?

In my Action Pack I also see something called Visual Web Developer 2005 -
Express Edition, which also looks, from the Microsoft web page on the
product like a good tool for this application.  But the code is very
proprietary and needs to be protected and I don't know if you can do this
with VWD.

Anyway, would VS2005 be a good tool to re-create the Sleep Advisor?  The
diagnostic engine has about 7000 lines of VBA and copying it over to VB and
tweaking it to make it run under VB would save a lot of work.  Or is this an
illusion?

I am also thinking about E-Z-MRP which is a major application by bulk and
scale and would require a lot of work.  But what for the back end? Can a
VS2005 application use an mdb?  Or does it need SQL Server?

Anyway I'm also wondering why I don't lay down until the feeling passes. 

But any advice is welcome.

TIA



Rocky Smolin
Beach Access Software
858-259-4334
www.e-z-mrp.com


-----Original Message-----
From: dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Gustav Brock
Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2007 1:58 AM
To: dba-tech at databaseadvisors.com
Subject: Re: [dba-Tech] (Fwd) Microsoft Breaks HTML Email Rendering in
Outlook 2007

Thanks Stuart

One more reason to avoid HTML e-mail.

/gustav

>>> stuart at lexacorp.com.pg 11-01-2007 02:52 >>>
Forwarded from another list I subscribe to:

---------included stuff follows ------------ SitePoint Blogs » Microsoft
Breaks HTML Email Rendering in Outlook
2007

    The following is republished from the Tech Times #156.

    If support for web standards in browsers is improving slowly,
    then support in email clients is moving at a glacial pace.
    Attempts to document things like CSS support in the major
    email clients have revealed a depressing state of affairs, but
    with recent desktop clients like Thunderbird now sitting on
    solid rendering engines, things have been looking up.

    All that changed when Microsoft dropped a lump of coal into
    every web developer´s stocking with the end-of-year release to
    business customers, and the upcoming consumer release, of
    Outlook 2007.

    ...

    But late last month, a thread in the SitePoint Forums caught
    my eye. Microsoft had published a pair of articles describing
    the support for HTML and CSS in Outlook 2007, and the news
    wasn´t good:

        Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 uses the HTML parsing
    and rendering engine from Microsoft Office Word 2007 to
    display HTML message bodies. The same HTML and cascading
    style sheets (CSS) support available in Word 2007 is
    available in Outlook 2007.

    The limitations imposed by Word 2007 are described in detail
    in the article, but here are a few highlights:

        * no support for background images (HTML or CSS)
        * no support for forms
        * no support for Flash, or other plugins
        * no support for CSS floats
        * no support for replacing bullets with images in
    unordered lists
        * no support for CSS positioning
        * no support for animated GIFs

    In short, unless your HTML emails are very, very simple,
    you´re going to run into problems with Outlook 2007, and in
    most cases the only solution to those problems will be to
    reduce the complexity of your HTML email design to accommodate
    Outlook´s limited feature set.

    With the release of Outlook 2007, Microsoft is effectively
    adding an entirely new rendering engine to the mix-one that
    designers producing HTML email will not be able to ignore.

    Not only that, but this new rendering engine isn´t any better
    than that which Outlook previously used-indeed, it´s far
    worse. With this release, Outlook drops from being one of the
    best clients for HTML email support to the level of Lotus
    Notes and Eudora, which, in the words of Campaign Monitor´s
    David Grenier, "are serial killers making our email design
    lives hell."

    Why on earth would Microsoft do such a thing? Security?
    Microsoft has been shouting from the rooftops about the new
    security model in Internet Explorer 7 that prevents the nasty
    security issues that have plagued Outlook in the past. It
    seems Microsoft doesn´t buy its own publicity, however,
    because this move sends the message that Internet Explorer´s
    security model is not to be trusted.

...

    ... you may want to consider giving your Outlook-based readers
    an easy way to switch to text-only email.

---------- included stuff ends -----------------

--
Lexacorp Ltd
http://www.lexacorp.com.pg <http://www.lexacorp.com.pg/> Information
Technology Consultancy, Software Development,System Support.




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