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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
Lexington, United States

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What's new in Web Matrix ?

I had been anticipating the release of Web Matrix 2.0, but was pretty disappointed with the blatant attempts to lock users into SQL Server and ACCESS (of course I know that manual imports are possible re. my .net provider for non Microsoft databases, but that's beside the point). From the feature list:

Easy Data UI Generation.  Web Matrix makes it easy to create data bound pages without writing code. Drop SQL/MSDE or Access tables on your page to create data-bound grids, or start with Data Page templates for reports or Master/Detail pages. Code builders help you generate code to select, insert, update and delete SQL/MSDE or Access data. 
 [via WebLogs @ ASP.NET]

It only makes it easy for two databases which are both Microsoft owned? What really baffles me is why they don't use ADO.NET, by the way this is their own data abstraction technology. The same approach has also been applied to InfoPath and this is certainly a disturbing trend for unsuspecting end-users, developers, systems architects, and decision makers. Before you know it you lose your database choices.
 
Could this be an oversight on the part of Microsoft? I don't think so somehow, we are taking a very interesting journey here from database independence to database specificity ( ODBC->OLEDB-ADO.NET-[SQL Server|Acces] ), all in a quest to covertly reduce choices (I think I've seen this movie before! And I might have to rewrite the script).
 
# PermaLink Comments [0]
06/18/2003 08:02 GMT-0500 Modified: 06/22/2006 08:56 GMT-0500
iTunes: Death of Record Companies
iTunes: Death of Record Companies

Check out this short Business 2.0 piece showing how each dollar collected per song is divided up.  Artists get 12 cents out of a dollar.  The music download service (i.e. Apple) gets 40 cents.  That leaves 48 cents up for grab as music download industry emerges, expands, and consolidates while the real world music distribution business shrinks.  I expect record companies will start to dwindle during the expansion phase as they start losing artists to the music download industry.  There will still be middlemen, but record companies will be left with peddling only oldies. [via Don Park's Blog]

# PermaLink Comments [0]
06/18/2003 07:45 GMT-0500 Modified: 06/22/2006 08:56 GMT-0500
iTunes: Death of Record Companies
iTunes: Death of Record Companies

Check out this short Business 2.0 piece showing how each dollar collected per song is divided up.  Artists get 12 cents out of a dollar.  The music download service (i.e. Apple) gets 40 cents.  That leaves 48 cents up for grab as music download industry emerges, expands, and consolidates while the real world music distribution business shrinks.  I expect record companies will start to dwindle during the expansion phase as they start losing artists to the music download industry.  There will still be middlemen, but record companies will be left with peddling only oldies. [via Don Park's Blog]

# PermaLink Comments [0]
06/18/2003 07:45 GMT-0500 Modified: 06/22/2006 08:56 GMT-0500
Get Ready for Yukon

Get Ready for Yukon

The next release of SQL Server promises increased developer productivity and reduced DBA workload.

by Roger Jennings June 2003 Issue .NET Magazine

After reading this article I decided to put together a simple comparitive analysis of our existing product and the soon to be released Yukon.

Our Universal Server product called Virtuoso will compete head on with this future release of SQL Server in many regards (.NET CLR hosting, Native XML Types, SQL-XML, XMLA, Web Services etc.), but I am also keen to see what interesting perspectives Microsoft's implementation brings to the table. Here is a summary comparison, note that some of the hyperlinks in the table below actually take you to live functionality demos (for effect these links point to a Linux server, and you can change the machine part of the url from "demo" to "kingsleydemo" to see the equivalent demos on an XP server).

# PermaLink Comments [0]
06/18/2003 01:19 GMT-0500 Modified: 06/22/2006 08:56 GMT-0500
         
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