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I am glad to see that Web Forms are not dying. I switched to developing Web applications during the last three years after programming Windows Apps in VB.Net for many years. Web Forms seemed to be easiest learning curve at that time. MVC seems to have too much plumbing for my taste. .
It's all about being productive quickly. Web Forms was easy for you to understand because it packages most of the "plumbing" required for real the HTTP request/response interactions, making a web form operate similar and well packaged like a windows form. MVC tends to expose the plumbing, giving more control to you the dev. However, how quickly one can develop in either is really up to you...
Despite the fact MS delivers versions very often, may be too often,
Visual Studio 2012 is still well behind good-old Eclipse+java technologies (where VS has been mimicked from originally)
1) Slow, I mean really slow
2) Crash-proven (just reboot VS, to make it work again)
3) The worst thing is that VS does not rely on the source code itself, it keeps some "knowledge" in its own metadata (xml) as a result, there often a need to restart VS to make your project work, etc.
4) you always on the MS hook to upgrade-upgrade-upgrade, buy-buy-buy
Mediocre technology gets marketed very well, Hype, hype, hype
Visual Studio 2012 is still well behind good-old Eclipse+java technologies (where VS has been mimicked from originally)
1) Slow, I mean really slow
2) Crash-proven (just reboot VS, to make it work again)
3) The worst thing is that VS does not rely on the source code itself, it keeps some "knowledge" in its own metadata (xml) as a result, there often a need to restart VS to make your project work, etc.
4) you always on the MS hook to upgrade-upgrade-upgrade, buy-buy-buy
Mediocre technology gets marketed very well, Hype, hype, hype
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