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My Web site is designed and programmed and runs as intended. I was delayed by independent events, beat those back, and now am collecting some initial data. But from the original post (OP) about "Four Ways" here, apparently I made a really big mistake, nope several biggies: I wrote the software using Windows 7 Professional, Visual Basic .NET, ASP.NET, ADO.NET, and SQL Server. What a user receives is old HTML and some CSS with little, maybe no, JavaScript. I didn't write any JavaScript at all, but ASP.NET wrote a little for me. At one point, I wanted a key-value store so used two instances of one of the .NET collection classes instead of Redis. That was a biggie mistake? So, apparently my work is none of the "Four Ways" of the OP. Biggie mistakes, right??? I don't get it: Looks to me like for some decades now, all around the world, people have been able to build (program, develop, etc.) Web sites using Windows 7, .NET, SQL Server. E.g., as I recall, Markus Frind developed a Web site using those tools, had the usage grow, ..., and sold the site for $500+ million. He did something wrong? Now there are some rules I don't know about, rules that say I must just junk my code, 100,000 lines of typing, and start over????? Those "Four Ways", they include something for my use of collection classes as simple versions of Redis? Or they include Redis? Oh, at it's core, my Web site has some original applied math -- those "Four Ways" have that already? I didn't get the memo that I can't use Windows 7, .NET, and SQL Server!!! What am I supposed to do, use better than Windows 7 Professional, .NET, SQL Server, and my applied math code???? |