Fairly interesting that they've now jumped ship again to aspx. I guess Sivers gets an itch any time a new web language turns the corner. What's worse is that CD Baby feels considerably slower than when I used it ages ago.
No no no. That apsx crap running the existing site is absolutely not mine.
I sold the company in 2008 to Disc Makers, a company whose internal systems are all Windows.
After leaving the site as it was (FreeBSD + PHP + MySQL + Ruby) for a year, they rewrote it all from scratch in Windows ASP stuff, so they could merge it with their existing systems.
I was long-gone and knew nothing about their rewrite until it was launched.
Funny thing is: when I sold the company, people kept asking, "How does it feel that it's not yours anymore?" It was always fine and didn't phase me a bit because it was still my software running the site. It still felt like my vision was upheld.
But when they trashed all my old software (even the internal intranet that all employees use to run operations!) - THEN it hurt. A single "View Source" on any page of cdbaby.com shows a bloated mess of crap that goes completely against the minimalist aesthetic that drove CD Baby for 10 years. That was really sad.
But, like the new owners painting your old house pink, it was the final proof that it's not mine anymore.
So it's crap only because it's aspx ? You don't know how the code looks on the server side, and it's not fair to judge a webapp by the resulting html alone.
> A single "View Source" on any page of cdbaby.com shows a bloated mess of crap that goes completely against the minimalist aesthetic that drove CD Baby for 10 years.
That's nothing to do with aspx, that's to do with wrecking a philosophy.
Aspx was the chosen tool to do the wrecking in, but that could have been anything else. You can write bad bloated code in just about any language.
I sold the company in 2008 to Disc Makers, a company whose internal systems are all Windows.
After leaving the site as it was (FreeBSD + PHP + MySQL + Ruby) for a year, they rewrote it all from scratch in Windows ASP stuff, so they could merge it with their existing systems.
I was long-gone and knew nothing about their rewrite until it was launched.
Funny thing is: when I sold the company, people kept asking, "How does it feel that it's not yours anymore?" It was always fine and didn't phase me a bit because it was still my software running the site. It still felt like my vision was upheld.
But when they trashed all my old software (even the internal intranet that all employees use to run operations!) - THEN it hurt. A single "View Source" on any page of cdbaby.com shows a bloated mess of crap that goes completely against the minimalist aesthetic that drove CD Baby for 10 years. That was really sad.
But, like the new owners painting your old house pink, it was the final proof that it's not mine anymore.