﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Ayende @ Rahien</title><link>http://ayende.com</link><description>Ayende @ Rahien</description><copyright>Copyright (C) Ayende Rahien  2004 - 2021 (c) 2026</copyright><ttl>60</ttl><item><title>Kenneth Kasajian commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>This will be very useful.
  
  
IoC/DI are here to stay, and will probably show up as language features in C# 5.0 or something like that.
  
  
But seriously, we need to have a Microsoft solution to this, and hopefully not something from open source but software that is guaranteed known to be only contributed by Microsoft employees.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment10</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment10</guid><pubDate>Fri, 14 Dec 2007 13:45:03 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Mr_You_Gotta_Own_It commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>When you're Microsoft you gotta own it so you can provide protection to the people who use it.  It's a legal issue as much as a not invented here issue.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment9</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment9</guid><pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2007 14:51:53 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Glenn Block commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>The part that seems to have gotten missed is that the block allows you to plug in the container of your choice. This means you can use Castle, Spring or even your own homegrown version.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment8</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment8</guid><pubDate>Wed, 05 Dec 2007 07:27:43 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Stuart Cam commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>MSTest.
  
  
To be honest I've been looking at the OSS world long enough to not notice MS reinvent that wheel!
  
  
My bad.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment7</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment7</guid><pubDate>Sun, 02 Dec 2007 19:59:50 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Joe commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>I think Hammett summed it up best somewhere when he mentioned the"throat to choke" when something goes wrong. 
  
  
@Stuart - "It has a very small and tentative mention of nUnit - probably on the basis that MS haven't reinvented that wheel just yet."
  
  
You don't count MSTest?  
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment6</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment6</guid><pubDate>Sat, 01 Dec 2007 20:08:50 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Oran commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>I wonder if licensing is one of the issues?  All 3 of those projects use the Apache 2.0 license which is similar in may ways to the MS-PL license, but there are some differences:
  
http://www.oreillynet.com/linux/blog/2007/05/patents_mspl_and_the_apache_20.html
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment5</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment5</guid><pubDate>Sat, 01 Dec 2007 18:48:31 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Eric Hauser commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>http://erichauser.net/?p=43
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment4</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment4</guid><pubDate>Sat, 01 Dec 2007 18:45:35 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Chris Brandsma commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>I agree with Stuart Cam.  Plus there are many businesses that don't allow OSS products to be used.  
  
  
I've heard excuses ranging from 1. Needing someone to sue, 2. Liability, 3. scared of loosing their intellectual property because of licensing restrictions (cough -- GPL)
  
  
So developer in this predicament have to choose between rolling their own (IOC can be written fairly easily, but you don't get a full featured product), or use what comes from Microsoft.   Often the other accepted products: StructureMap, Spring, and Windsor, aren't worth the hassle of getting management and legal to sign off on.
  
  
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment3</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment3</guid><pubDate>Sat, 01 Dec 2007 18:33:05 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Emanuele DelBono commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>+1
  
I strongly strongly agree with you!
  
Why Ms do this?
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment2</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment2</guid><pubDate>Sat, 01 Dec 2007 14:15:49 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Stuart Cam commented on Strategy Provisioning for Application Management b...</title><description>Many IT shops will only adopt a technology or feature that has been "ordained" by MS.
  
  
The current organisation I am contracting for has a .NET development guidance document that locks developers exclusively into the Enterprise Library. It has a very small and tentative mention of nUnit - probably on the basis that MS haven't reinvented that wheel just yet.
  
  
MS has the "power" to reach out to the other 80% of programmers. Something that many OSS projects, no matter how great, find hard to do.
  
  
Just take a look at the MVC mindshift on Web Forms. Surely due to pressure from the ALT.NET community actually feeding back into the MS monolith?
</description><link>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment1</link><guid>http://ayende.com/2981/strategy-provisioning-for-application-management-b#comment1</guid><pubDate>Sat, 01 Dec 2007 12:58:40 GMT</pubDate></item></channel></rss>