Jeffery Palermo says 'Classic WebForms More Mature Than ASP.NET MVC': "Is Classic WebForms More Mature Than ASP.NET MVC?".
It seems to be subjective, but what I want to know is, what exactly "mature" software is?
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Jeffery Palermo says 'Classic WebForms More Mature Than ASP.NET MVC': "Is Classic WebForms More Mature Than ASP.NET MVC?". It seems to be subjective, but what I want to know is, what exactly "mature" software is?
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The answer is very subjective. But basically if the software can answer to most of these criteria (in no order of importance):
Then it can be considered "mature". It is important to note that different clients would expect different levels of "maturity". A large corporation would demand that the software it uses is secure enough to protect its sensitive data, and that the software is supported by a support rep available 24/7. As opposed to a small private project of your own which you might care much less about security, and you do not need (nor can afford) a service package which includes 24/7 customer support. So ,maturity differentiates according to the client, but the basic criteria remain the same. |
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Mature is when people have figured out how to deal with it. (And we're talking about development platforms not about end-user apps, aren't we?) For example, javascript only became mature with the introduction of prototype, jquery and the like. Before that, people tend to code strange things they they'd regret. |
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So you're asking for subjective opinions on a subjective topic. :) I would say, mature would add the following characteristic to a technology:
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Reduce Subjectivity by Developing a Measuring Tool for yourself. My Criteria are for Business Software:
Take all the Criteria and place it in a spreadsheet with columns rating from 0 - 5 and do a rating by ticking the column corresponding to your rating of each criteria.
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Mature software has to be whatever you mean it to be. I don't think you will find an easy mechanism for measuring maturity, and everyone's definition is going to differ anyway. It's always going to be a subjective view I'm afraid and therefore subject to a lot of argument. |
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I would say that mature software is stable, well documented, widely used and well tested. |
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