Hanselminutes Podcast 90 - Dan Appleman
My ninetieth podcast is up. In this episode, I chat with Dan Appleman. I first heard of Dan when I used his SpyWorks VBX to get VB3 on Windows for Workgroups to do all sorts of things it wasn't supposed to do. Dan still owns Desaware and does consulting on the side. He also created SearchDotNet, a human-edited Google Search specific to .NET development. He blogs infrequently at http://www.danappleman.com.
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Check out their UI Suite of controls for ASP.NET. It's very hardcore stuff. One of the things I appreciate about Telerik is their commitment to completeness. For example, they have a page about their Right-to-Left support while some vendors have zero support, or don't bother testing. They also are committed to XHTML compliance and publish their roadmap. It's nice when your controls vendor is very transparent.
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Enjoy. Who knows what'll happen in the next show?
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
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I don't think I've ever opened it. I bought it because of his great API documentation but it turned out I didn't need to use the API anymore.
APress books are pretty damn good. I hope Dan stays focused in that area IMHO.
I don't know what he's up to lately but I haven't seen anything new from him for a loong time. His products at desaware.com are the same ones I have seen for years. Same website content too. His API book was invaluable duing my early VB days.
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I used to do some applications on a moonlighting basis when I didn't have to pay for office space, employees etc and let me tell you it's entirely a different world when once that change is made.
I agree with many of the criticisms of the large consultant shops. But the small shops suffer from many of the same issues.
He said something to the effect of
"What is your budget.. ok I can do something for that amount"
If you were asking someone that was shopping for cars if they would like it to go 225 mph and get 50 mpg? Of course they would.
There are things that are great that many clients may or may not be interested in paying for. Error logging, Unit Test, User Management, Support, Browser Compatibility, etc. Certainly if we all were looking out for their best interest we would do these things. However if they are trying to keep the project cost low then cuts have to be made somewhere.
If we were looking out for their best interest all of their web apps would work on phones, tivos and everything else for no extra charge. It's not charity it's business.
Also if any software shop were to use the "Here is what you are not getting approach" then they would eat way to many hours. If I were the customer that would imply to me that anything not listed as "not getting" but conceivably in the scope would be done gratis.
Good luck to him if he can stay alive with that model without extremely expensive support contracts.