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After the recent announcement by Scott Guthrie that JQuery would receive official support from Microsoft (http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2008/09/28/jquery-and-microsoft.aspx), many people see that as the heralding of a new dawn.

We missed out on NUnit (MsTest), NDoc (Sandcastle) and NHibernate (Linq to SQL/Entity Framework) for sure, but what do you think should be embraced next?

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Also on the "missed" list: Castle Monorail (ASP.NET MVC) – James Curran Oct 6 '08 at 12:02
Yes, we have the Unity Application Block for Castle project i believe – Keith Patton Oct 6 '08 at 12:11

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Mono - it will give them (official) access to other OS, Linux for Development.

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Plus I read an article where Mono is following a standard (ECMA, perhaps, I can't recall) that .NET does not follow. – Thomas Owens Oct 6 '08 at 12:05
Eh? That makes no sense. Pls come back with actual article. – Will Oct 6 '08 at 12:12
To be fair, i believe Microsoft submits the specifications for the Common Language Infrastructure (CLI) to ECMA. – Keith Patton Oct 6 '08 at 12:14
infoq.com/news/2008/10/Mono-2 - "On the compiler front, C# 3 is supported with full LINQ support. Very large arrays using 64-bt indexes are supported on 64-bit machines, a part of the ECMA specification that Microsoft has not implemented yet." – Thomas Owens Oct 6 '08 at 12:18
Unfortunately ( or fortunately depends on where you look at it ) That won't happen. – Oscar Reyes Nov 28 '08 at 3:15
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Linux + WINE + Mono!!

Seriously, they have the resources to fix up WINE to do most of their Windows stuff, and they wouldn't have to write their own OS anymore. It seems to be working well enough for Apple with BSD. They'd still be able to develop Windows-only stuff, and would be able to put more resources into innovation, and probably still be able to make as much money selling Windows, even though it would be built on top of Linux.

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i walked into that one right? ;) – Keith Patton Oct 6 '08 at 11:57
Sorry, I couldn't help myself ;-) – Vincent Oct 6 '08 at 12:01
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Notepad++

So none of us will ever have to put up with regular Notepad ever again.

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textpad.com – Peter Wone Nov 28 '08 at 3:42
flos-freeware.ch/notepad2.html - 100% Free and the best text editor I have ever seen. – Sam152 May 27 at 9:54
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They should support cross platform development (that is to say projects like Mono and Wine) so that developers can code once, build once and deploy everywhere.

But will they? I doubt it. Not any time soon.

There's a sharp difference between recognising a Javascript framework that only enhances your product and supporting other platforms that, with time, would cannibalise sales of your own desktop platform.

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Why the hell should they support a competitor's product? That sounds pretty irresponsible towards your stockholders. – Will Oct 6 '08 at 12:15
well, you have support for MoonLight (Silverlight using Mono for Linux support) weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/…. – Keith Patton Oct 6 '08 at 12:16
Because cross-platform solutions help EVERYONE, including themselves. It cuts development time for those software companies who want to develop on, ie. OS X and Windows at the same time. Alot of companies are seriously looking at this. Microsoft themselves have had OS X versions of Office for ages. – Matthew Scharley Oct 6 '08 at 12:21
Microsoft is interested in open source because they ultimately believe they can make money out of it, not in order to make life easy for Linux-users/developers. If it means getting everyone to lock themselves into Microsoft technology, so be it. – JesperE Oct 6 '08 at 12:29
To be completely honest, I don't particularly care who made it, as long as it works, does what I need, and it works where I want/need it to work. Open source, and cross-platform solutions help make this a reality. – Matthew Scharley Oct 6 '08 at 23:04
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Boo Language or IronPython

(of course Mono)

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Ummm... don't think already "embrace" IronPython, considering it is from Microsoft? Now Boo, yeah, definitely. – David Mohundro Oct 6 '08 at 12:17
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Would MySQL be too much to ask?

(I know. But I can hope.)

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Not going to happen. MySQL got bought out by Sun, which owns Java, which is the direct competitor to .Net. Actually, POSTGRESQL would be a much better product for them to embrace in this area. – Kibbee Nov 28 '08 at 3:09
Too late, its already been taked. – Oscar Reyes Nov 28 '08 at 3:13

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