ChatterBank1 min ago
Apprenta Good OR Bad
2 Answers
Hi Can anyone give me a clear understanding of .NET
Cheers
And as anyone heard of a company called Apprenta and there thoughts please scam or no scam
Thank you
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Best to let Microsoft explain .Net :
http://www.microsoft.com/net/basics.mspx
Though I think this is a very simplified explanation.
Some (not too good) opinions on Apprenta can be found here :
http://www.certforums.co.uk/forums/thread7494. html
They quote the training as 16k which is way over the mark. It's more like 4k... which I still think is better investing in Open University than with an MS qualification.
http://www.microsoft.com/net/basics.mspx
Though I think this is a very simplified explanation.
Some (not too good) opinions on Apprenta can be found here :
http://www.certforums.co.uk/forums/thread7494. html
They quote the training as 16k which is way over the mark. It's more like 4k... which I still think is better investing in Open University than with an MS qualification.
.Net is MS's answer to Java. The theory behind Java was that it was a return to interpreted language, which gave it the advantage of being cross-platform (at least for any platform where the interpreter [run time library] was available). As far as MS was concerned, it had two major disadvantages: It was not dependant on MS or Windows and it it was not controlled by MS. They first tried to fix this by breaking the Java licensing conditions, and producing their own version.
When the courts forced them to stop this, they first reacted by stamping their feet and refusing to play ball - hence the need for many people to download the Sun Java environment.
When this disn't work, they came up with plan B. As the majority of development languages are produced by MS, they simply modified them all, so that whichever language you chose to develop in, it was reliant on the same run time environment. They pushed this as a major advance.
The result is that even for some trivial programs, you need around 22 Mb of runtime library (in addition to the main exe), and some programs which have been re-wriiten in .net are so slow on the average machine as to be almost unusable.
According to the New York Times "In recent years, Microsoft has spent more than $3 billion settling lawsuits [relating to antitrust, monopoly abuse and patent infringement]" but don't worry, underneath it all they're really good guys!
When the courts forced them to stop this, they first reacted by stamping their feet and refusing to play ball - hence the need for many people to download the Sun Java environment.
When this disn't work, they came up with plan B. As the majority of development languages are produced by MS, they simply modified them all, so that whichever language you chose to develop in, it was reliant on the same run time environment. They pushed this as a major advance.
The result is that even for some trivial programs, you need around 22 Mb of runtime library (in addition to the main exe), and some programs which have been re-wriiten in .net are so slow on the average machine as to be almost unusable.
According to the New York Times "In recent years, Microsoft has spent more than $3 billion settling lawsuits [relating to antitrust, monopoly abuse and patent infringement]" but don't worry, underneath it all they're really good guys!
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