On Wednesday, 25 January 2023 08:33:59 PST Michael Jackson wrote:
> Like someone else said, it becomes inertia. Our tools work on a daily basis
> and any interruption to those tools becomes a productivity issue. Small
> productivity losses I can handle, losing multiple days to an "upgrade" just
> i
Actually, on macOS, XCode is specifically tied to a version of macOS. There is
a short period of time where a version of Xcode will overlap 2 versions of
macOS (usually the current and one version back). So for me, still back on
macOS Catalina (out of choice) I use Xcode 12.4 which also works on
Hi,
On 25/01/2023 14:44, Adam Light wrote:
What I also didn't know is that if you've purchased the licence
for a given
VS, you're not entitled to the upgrade to the next. I know this is
how it used
to be with Microsoft Office back in the 90s and even the old
Visual Studi
On Tue, Jan 24, 2023 at 4:41 PM Thiago Macieira
wrote:
>
> Ah, interesting. I'd completely forgotten Visual Studio is a paid product
> (who
> had the bright idea of charging for the ability to develop software for a
> given OS? Don't they want to enrich said OS with more software?). I only
> use