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JDelekto

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Latest activity by JDelekto

MikeONeill wrote: Firstly I see a lot of the commentary is from people who have joined this Forum since Feb 11. So clearly not routine Red Gate users, and do not contribute to the community with experiences from the use of Red Gate products and involvement in Beta Testing etc. They just join up to moan... MikeONeill wrote: As a community are we getting too used to freebies, after all as professional developers how often to we work on a project and "Give it away" , I suspect not too often , we are all in it for the money so why should not a commercial operation like Red Gate take the same approach. Greets Mike, I couldn't agree more! I highlighted a couple points in your post to point out that: a) I didn't sign up to the forums until recently; and b) professional developers should not be used to getting free tools that deserve compensation. There are a lot of stand-alone tools which are free or require some fee to unlock their full potential. I have quite a few that I've obtained for my tool-chest and have recently purchased the .NET tools from Red Gate to assist even more with the development process. It was actually the notice that Red Gate was going to charge for Reflector that made me decide to go ahead and purchase their other products along with it. There have been at least 4 times that I have used Reflector in order to find bugs in framework code, third-party code or verify that an assembly in production contained the same code as the binaries on a build machine. However, I was definitely in need of some good .NET profiling tools and Red Gate seems to have the best on the market. / comments
MikeONeill wrote: Firstly I see a lot of the commentary is from people who have joined this Forum since Feb 11. So clearly not routine Red Gate users, and do not contribute to the community with...
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petera wrote: Hello, I think you've made a really shitty move on the community. You say you want to become a great software company and that you want to make a successful business model for Reflector. Well, guess what? You are doing the exact opposite. This will give you shit storms of bad publicity. If you can't make it the success you expect it to be, I suggest you just hand it over to the open source community at CodePlex. I'm sure there'll be people out there more competent than you guys to drive this forward in a manner that doesn't back stab the developers. I just want to remind you of this quote: "Our commitment is to maintain an amazing free tool that will continue to benefit the community while seeking input from users on ways to make .NET Reflector even more valuable." Well, you have failed at that commitment. Big time. Your parents should feel really ashamed of your actions and for not giving you a higher sense of morale and making you men of your words. I really don't hope for your guys sake that Anonymous picks this up. Nowhere in that quote is it said that they are committed to providing any user a 'free' version of their acquired product. I think that their commitment of maintaining an "amazing free tool" is quite adequate and just because they have acquire a free tool, maintained it and supplied it to others for no cost initially does not violate their commitment. I can personally vouch that they have maintained and improved the tool since its acquisition. There is nothing for them to be ashamed about. Cheers. / comments
petera wrote: Hello, I think you've made a really shitty move on the community. You say you want to become a great software company and that you want to make a successful business model for Refl...
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The_Assimilator wrote: Lutz Roeder, a one-man show, released a high-quality tool that he maintained for many years. As soon as he turned it over to your "awesome developers", quality took a dive, and now you have the gall to charge us money for this tool because it allegedly takes a lot to maintain? You REALLY expect anyone to believe this crap? Well, as I see it, 'quality' of the product did not take a dive at all --in fact, it increase in quality when Red-Gate took it over, for the simple reason that the .NET languages have changed in form. I can assure you that an older version of Lutz's Reflector would make more "garbledy-gook" out of the C# 3.0 language specification where the compiler used so much "syntactic sugar" it would make its teeth rot. I'm actually thankful that someone was able to take over the development of reflector so that one could make better sense of reading the code (though still not perfected) much better as the language itself generated new code. It does take a lot to maintain, sir, because the developers have to understand the nuances of the language, the compiled output and how to translate it back to something readable. In addition, they've been augmenting the product to integrate with Visual Studio and debugging which, by the way, has been quite helpful with 3rd party buggy components. I happen to appreciate their products. Cheers. / comments
The_Assimilator wrote: Lutz Roeder, a one-man show, released a high-quality tool that he maintained for many years. As soon as he turned it over to your "awesome developers", quality took a dive...
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Ettery wrote: Just asking. Maybe someone at RedGate could answer? My impression was that RedGate took over the tool on condition that they would continue to offer a free version. No doubt they knew it would bring them some profile and traffic in the .NET community. The software and community were already built. Whether you did or not, you should demonstrate your integrity by open-sourcing the code at the point where you took it over. I think it's fair then that you get paid for any additional value you have added... but anything else makes you look downright dishonest. The source code for Lutz Roeder's Reflector (at least from the versions I have used up until Red-Gate had acquired it) was not "Open Source" and I do not think the Open Source community has any reason or right to strong arm a company into releasing any intellectual property that they have acquired through legal means. Perhaps you should do what the "Open Source" community did for Blender, collect the money and buy it from the 'bank'. Then, if the 'bank' decides to hand it over, you can bend it, shape it - any way you want it. Just because a person gives their application away for 'free' out of the goodness of their heart does not mean it is "Open Source" or open season. / comments
Ettery wrote: Just asking. Maybe someone at RedGate could answer? My impression was that RedGate took over the tool on condition that they would continue to offer a free version. No doubt they...
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Greets sirflimflam, To be honest, I don't think they've done anything underhanded and sleazy. The "time bomb" in the code, to which you refer, is mainly the forced upgrade to the latest version to continue using the software. I am convinced that the whole purpose of this was *not* to get people to pay for the software (how many years since Lutz released it and Red-Gate took over has it been free now?) but instead, to reduce the amount of support e-mails and requests from people who are using versions of the software that have known defects, deficiences or lack of features. Think about it, by keeping people on the "same page" as the sole developer who was working on the application, they could limit the "background noise" from people who managed to get their hands on an older version which had probably circulated the Web tenfold. It is actually an ingenious strategy in avoiding support requests. Now, I'm not sure about intentionally crippling software; however, I think that the meager sum of $35 (probably less than the cost for dinner out for two at a decent restaurant) is well worth having a copy of the software without any of the future "forced upgrades"; however, they will have to deal with that in support for those who paid within the agreed time range. There is always a trade-off. If they can get version 7 to correctly decompile custom iterators (in which C# generates a 'state machine'), that would be impressive enough to pay that and more. Unlike you, I am not departing with my wallet; in fact, I was so impressed by their performance and memory profiling tools, that I bought the .NET Developer bundle (which comes with .NET Reflector Pro), so I will get version 7 when it is released. I am not sure what 'prinicple' it is for which you would not contribute a small sum for such a great product that a company has actually updated throughout the time of its acquisition. As a developer community, we should still be supporting our own developer who continue to develop tools that make our lives easier. There have been other .NET decompilers; however, they are not free. There are even some that have 'deobfuscation'; however, unless you are in the industry of stealing intellectual property, it is probably not worth the time or money to go after those more expensive products which will cost you at least ten times the amount they are asking for Reflector. Hopefully you find the best utility out there which does not either shrink your wallet or compromise your principles! Cheers! / comments
Greets sirflimflam, To be honest, I don't think they've done anything underhanded and sleazy. The "time bomb" in the code, to which you refer, is mainly the forced upgrade to the latest version to...
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