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From the Blogosphere PowerBuilder in Asia Pacific
A visit to the Sybase office in Hong Kong
By: Yakov Werde
Oct. 27, 2010 12:59 PM
Whenever traveling to a new venue, I concern myself with learning about the state local PowerBuilder community while promoting PowerBuilder .NET, eLearnIT's free .NET training resources hosted on Sybase.com and eLearnIT's online PowerBuilder Classic courses offer through ISUG. This week, personal affairs brought me to Hong Kong, China, a bustling oriental city. While there I had the distinct pleasure of meeting with Young Wong, Manager and Technical Evangelist whose responsibilities include the PowerBuilder product line. Young's territory includes the Philippines, Hong Kong, mainland China, and Singapore and extends southward to Australia and New Zealand. Young's description of the state of PowerBuilder matched that of other regions; Majority percentage mature enterprise scale Classic applications some still running on version 6.x, either in maintenance mode or dormant; minority percentage still in active or new development. Young spoke of the pressure PowerBuilder developers are feeling from management to abandon their code and rewrite in .NET or Java. Young and I speculated as to whether having Silverlight and browser based deployment support today would be sufficient to keep most the shops in the fold. I mentioned the many Appeon for PowerBuilder success stories and how it was possible to migrate entire enterprise applications with little to no modification directly to the web including MDI. Young asked me what I thought the major impediments to migration to .NET were. We listed management support for PowerBuilder as a platform and tooling set as number one, followed closely by developer readiness for .NET, including familiarity with the environment, platform and tools as number two. I placed setting user expectations about differences in the UI as number three. We both agreed that it was in the best interest of all customers to reduce risk and cost in any future development by leveraging their existing code assets in any new development effort. We talked about changes in developer education due to budgetary and time constraints coupled with the unavailability of traditional instructor led classroom training in the region. I responded by showing him how online / on demand / interactive streaming rich media content can create a self-paced learning experience that is classroom quality. I introduced Young to eLearnIT's unique online core PowerBuilder training http://www.isug.com/common/PBTraining.html . He was quite impressed by the richness of the learning experience and the comprehensiveness of its content. He agreed that it addresses a need and fills the gap. Enterprise Open Source Magazine Latest Stories . . .
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