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So where am I? Ah yes, 1988. The project I’d been hired to work on was cancelled after a few months (I expect I’m in good company on that score), that project by the way was a cute variant on the C language designed for incremental compilation – it was called, cough, C#. Strangely, through the lens of 2009, it looks remarkably like what you would get if you tried to make C.Net.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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That was an excellent read! Thank You!
(kept me from actually working for > 15 minutes at least!)
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
"Hope is contagious"
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Rick York wrote: C# did not appear in it until 2003.
My archives folder shows
VS6
VS97
VS2002 (.NET 1.0)
VS2003 (.NET 1.1)
VS2005 (.NET 2.0)
.
.
.
When mounting the ISO for VS 2002, I can see most of files have a timestamp of January 2002. This is where .NET was introduced. C# was very much part of it.
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Yes, 2002 is the correct year. I had all of those versions of VS except for 2002. I never used that one. I remember joining the MSDN and getting NT when it was in beta and installing VS97 on it. The next several years were very enjoyable.
"They have a consciousness, they have a life, they have a soul! Damn you! Let the rabbits wear glasses! Save our brothers! Can I get an amen?"
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VS 2022 (page does not exist)
:squishing noise:
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We migrated to it a week after release (always wait for at least the X.0.1 release!).
We've not had any issues at all with it - it's been remarkably smooth. It'll take up more memory because they (finally) converted it to 64 bit, but there's a number of gains that were realized because of that conversion.
We have a variety of applications as well, and solutions with over a hundred projects of varying types, though we've done pretty good at getting everything to be "standardized" on targeting either .Net 4.8 or .Net 6 (we did quick upgrades after release for all our .Net core based applications).
I personally like it quite a bit. They cleaned up the dark mode as well so there's no longer random bright glaring controls or panels running around.
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VS2022 have more problems with TFS and SCE then before, and of course older problems are not solved.
I have problems building and COM registering dlls. Using VS2019 for that.
I have problems with nesting files in Solution Explorer, it was solved in VS2019, and got broken in VS2022.
Got some problems with ATL C++ project but that was fixed in an update.
As you can see I'm not happy.
Still, my org is trying to move some services to .NET 6 witch is not possible in VS2019.
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Thanks for the feedback. In general it appears VS 2022 is fine, but from your feedback and others I've followed, there are a lot of irritating details.
Everything I'm working on is either in framework 4.8 or being migrated to 4.8, so I'm not seeing a pressing need to upgrade to 2022.
I am going to recommend to management that we look at .NET 6 for all future projects.
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David Fenn - The Grey Crow[^]
Bit late today, but better late than never!
Last week, I played Death's Door, one of the best indie games of 2021.
Very cool game with a pretty unique vibe and a cool soundtrack.
Basically, crows are reapers that go and collect souls of those whose time has come and you're playing as one such crow.
Of course all is not as it seems and so your adventure begins.
At one point, you fight a grey crow, and this song is the soundtrack to that fight.
The beautiful piano music is a bit of a contrast with the intensity of the fight.
Great visuals too, a completely white background with two black crows, black chains and your weapon, which is brightly colored.
Probably the most aesthetically pleasing boss fights I've ever seen and SOTW
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Nice. the full album track has many nice songs too.
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Yes it does!
I had a hard time picking a song (Main Theme, Ceramic Manor and Avarice are great too, for example), but I really loved the Grey Crow boss fight so I went for that one.
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I like it
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I saw Billy a few years ago.
He could barely talk as his voice box sounded totally shredded, but oh-boy, he's still an amazing singer.
// TODO: Insert something here Top ten reasons why I'm lazy
1.
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Does he still pour himself into the leathers? I once read about him saying how disgusting they got.
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I don't think I know any of his songs besides White Wedding, and I only know that one because Murderdolls covered it[^].
I didn't expect him and his band to be so rock 'n roll
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Sander Rossel wrote: I only know that one because Murderdolls covered it[^].
The original was far better. Idol did some really nice stuff, even after the songs he is famous for.
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Better than expected actually!
Reminded me of Simple Minds on a couple occasions.
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LATITUDE?
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I thought it would last a little longer than that!
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Way it goes sometimes - a difficult one vanishes early and the easy ones get nothing.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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