Microsoft Targets Solo Programmers with New Visual Studio Version
Microsoft hopes pro-level individual developers now running Visual Basic tools will take to the new Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition environment introduced at VSLive Orlando conference.
ORLANDO, Fla.Microsoft Corp. announced another edition of its upcoming development tools family, releasing information on Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition at the VSLive! Orlando conference here. In his keynote address to the developer audience, Microsoft Developer Division Corporate Vice President Soma Somasegar said Visual Studio 2005 will round out the Visual Studio 2005 product line, which is expected to hit the market in mid-2005. The Visual Studio family will include Microsofts Visual Studio 2005 Express products, Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition, Visual Studio 2005 Professional Edition and Visual Studio 2005 Team System.
To read an interview with Rick LaPlante, Microsoft general manager of Visual Studio Team System, on the product, click here.
Compuware is upbeat on Microsofts application development lifecycle approach. Click here to read more.
In fact, Microsoft officials said the newly announced Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition features much of the simplicity of the Visual Studio Express products but includes richer features for building data-driven smart client and Web applications. Microsoft, of Redmond, Wash., said more than 360,000 beta versions of the Visual Studio Express products have been downloaded since they were made available in June 2004.
Click here to read more about the first beta of Visual Studio 2005.
In addition, Microsoft officials said Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition includes support for add-in tools and components developed by the more than 200 Visual Studio Integration Partners (VSIP).
"Since its foundation in 1998, the Component Vendor Consortium has worked with Microsoft developers and seen first-hand the return on investment that they get from building applications for the .NET Framework," said Rich Little, president of the Component Vendor Consortium, of Milford, N.H., in a statement. "With todays announcement of Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition, Microsoft has created new opportunities for Visual Basic 6.0 developers and the controls vendors who were a part of that community."
Despite the touted cooperation between Microsoft and Sun Microsystems Inc. following the spring settlement of Suns Java virtual machine lawsuit, the companies still compete tooth-and-nail for developers and their tools.
"For several years now Sun has established tools and developer offerings that suit several profiles of developers, and its interesting to see other tools offerings following suit," said Jim Inscore, group product marketing manager, with Sun Microsystems, of Santa Clara, Calif. "Because theyre based on Java standards, Suns tools help developers avoid lock in to proprietary runtimes inherent in some other tool suites."
"Its true that corporate and mainstream software developers should not be over simplified into a single category," he continued. "The Java programming language and the NetBeans open-source IDE present the optimum standards-based developer foundation. Building on NetBeans, Sun offers Java Studio Creator for business developers who dont want to deal with the details of programming and Java Studio Enterprise for developers who need to build more scalable, enterprise apps. Best of all, developers investments in Creator apps can be preserved as they move upscale as the standards-based code can be consumed by Java Studio Enterprise."
Meanwhile, Microsoft announced the release of the Visual Studio 2005 Beta 1 Refresh to both Microsoft Developer Network and (MSDN) subscribers and attendees at VSLive! Orlando. The refresh will include Visual Studio 2005 Team Foundation.
In addition, Microsofts Somasegar informed attendees of the availability of Visual Studio .Net 2003 Special Edition, a suite that includes Visual Studio .NET 2003, Windows Server 2003 Developer Edition, SQL Server 2000 Developer Edition and Visual Studio Tools for Office. The suite enables developers to build ASP.Net Web applications and Visual Basic applications. The suite will sell for $749 and $549 for upgrades.
On the communication and community front, Roxe said Microsoft has been "aggressively trying to get a lot of feedback from customers," mainly through the MSDN Product Feedback Center, formerly known as LadyBug internally. "Its a very direct pipe from our users into our developers."
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