Yup, its the end of the programmer. That breed has been ill for a long time
now. They are expensive and ill-mannered socially.
Enter the age of the Software Engineer!
--
Regards,
Alvin Bruney [MVP ASP.NET]
[Shameless Author plug]
The Microsoft Office Web Components Black Book with .NET
Now Available @
www.lulu.com/owc
Forth-coming VSTO.NET - Wrox/Wiley 2006
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I've briefly worked on a few tutorials for VS.net 2005 and WHOA! I created
a database lookup with paging and ability to Add, Edit, or delete in less
than 5 minutes. Is this the end of programming as we know it. I was simply
amazed at how simple it was and how it did not require any code - only point
and click. My question to the group is, with the automation of such
programming task and the interface making it easier and easier, do you think
programming as we know it in ASP 3.0 will exist or will we only be
configuring templates /altering properties to create "customized"
applications?
Glad to hear
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I've briefly worked on a few tutorials for VS.net 2005 and WHOA! I created
a database lookup with paging and ability to Add, Edit, or delete in less
than 5 minutes. Is this the end of programming as we know it. I was simply
amazed at how simple it was and how it did not require any code - only point
and click. My question to the group is, with the automation of such
programming task and the interface making it easier and easier, do you think
programming as we know it in ASP 3.0 will exist or will we only be
configuring templates /altering properties to create "customized"
applications?
Glad to hear