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newswireless.net .:. Features .:. Catching mobile developers in a dot-Net …
Catching mobile developers in a dot-Net with CE 5 as bait - Microsoft sets trap
But for me, the significant part of the deal is that it pushes .Net framework out there. The whole Compact Framework is now built into all Windows Mobile devices and while there's a lot more to "embedded" than mobile, mobile is still where Microsoft sees growth. And if it can hook a whole bunch of Express buyers for a $30 entrance fee and a whole bunch of mobile developers for a $999 developer package, then the number of .Net frameworks out there will grow.
you're reading: Catching mobile developers in a dot-Net with CE 5 as bait - Microsoft sets trap
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Newswireless.Net .:. Features .:. Catching Mobile Developers In A Dot-net €¦ - newswireless.net .:. Features .:. Catching mobile developers in a dot-Net …
Catching mobile developers in a dot-Net with CE 5 as bait - Microsoft sets trap
It isn't really a big secret that there's a horrible discontinuity between the number of developers Microsoft boasts about - millions! - and the number of those who have gone for the global XML-based solution of .Net Framework, and the developer product, Visual Studio .Net. Maybe, the new strategy of opening up embedded Windows may change that? Today in Amsterdam, Microsoft revealed that its newest version of Windows CE, version 5.0, will have a new licensing scheme. And it also showed the tempting morsels of Express versions of all its development packages. Together, it reckons this will make it possible to start moving the reluctant little fish into the big .Net.
The short answer, according to Hardy Poppinga, who is "embedded device group PR manager" for Microsoft EMEA and who ought to know, is "No, this isn't open source. And no, this isn't any part of our strategy in mobile devices, or if it is, nobody has mentioned it to me."
The problem with the success of .Net is that it has been almost entirely corporate-focused. That's good news, of course, because Microsoft needs corporate developers, especially at the top-end of the applications tree.
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Features
by Guy Kewney | posted on 29 June 2004
So the first question you might like to ask the mobility people in Microsoft is "Just how open source is this new licence?" - and after that, "Is this really part of the strategy to make .Net more popular?"
But if it isn't, perhaps it should be.
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