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HomeHomeOur CommunityOur CommunityGeneral Discuss...General Discuss...Commercial Module version released killed DNN for 19 days!Commercial Module version released killed DNN for 19 days!
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7/7/2008 1:39 AM
 

Hi

Well if it was me I would have mentioned the developer to keep other away from it especially if it would have cost me money time and more important reputation.  Especiially to keep others from making the same misstake in getting a product with inadequate support and unfrinedly reactions.

Maybe if you would mention the module we could take a look at the features and suggest you with somethign maybe even a free moduyle that would do what you needed to replace this headache module from your system.

 
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7/8/2008 11:25 AM
 

Well, as much as I hate to say it, Armand might have a point here.

While it is important to keep things in a public forum civil I think it is also important to the project and it's community to be vocal about it's good as well as bad.  One of the benefits of open source - it doesn't have to be a "buyer beware" like commercial products can sometimes be.

I have a very good idea of the developer DavidT is speaking of as I had very similiar experiences.  Luckily I found out the quality of this developers products / support before I used any of their modules in a production environment so my pain wasn't nearly as bad as DavidT's but the subscription wasn't cheap so there was some financial pain. Not to mention the frustration of those very short support emails (when you were lucky enough to get an answer at all!).

I have heard from / about many other people who have had bad experiences here and a small few who actually liked the modules. The question is whether we are doing a good thing or a bad thing by keeping mum on the developer's name???

Greg

 
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7/8/2008 11:42 AM
 

It is very hard to truly investigate a module for quality, a key item is really to know the reputation of the developer, and their credentials.  Buying from well established companies will be a better bet in the long run.

I will say that for a module to kill .NET 2.0's installation on your server is a very interesting feat as I have NEVER had a module do something like that in the past.

I know that I have in multiple cases performed code reviews for people that have purchased custom modules, and that has helped them monitor quality, but even a quick code review might not catch everything.


-Mitchel Sellers
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CEO/Director of Development - IowaComputerGurus Inc.
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Visit mitchelsellers.com for my mostly DNN Blog and support forum.

Visit IowaComputerGurus.com for free DNN Modules, DNN Performance Tips, DNN Consulting Quotes, and DNN Technical Support Services
 
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7/8/2008 6:02 PM
 

When I first started using DNN (years ago) it seemed the thing to do was find every free module out there, and purchase others, and provide every kind of functionality possible.

That was a long time ago indeed. Now the goal is to squeeze down the number of vendors to a minimum for many reasons. Knowing you got good folk, knowing you're helping improve functionality of solid products and fewer places to go for support. Fewer folks who might affect what you are providing to your clients - good service.

Still, it's not all in one place. And we can't know the rep unless we hear it. I guess I don't see the point in the mystery. Civility is one thing but knowledge is important, too.


pmgerholdt
 
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7/8/2008 7:12 PM
 

armand datema wrote

Well if it was me I would have mentioned the developer to keep other away from it especially if it would have cost me money time and more important reputation.  Especiially to keep others from making the same misstake in getting a product with inadequate support and unfrinedly reactions.

This one wouldn't be very hard to figure out, just go to David's website and review the source code.

 
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HomeHomeOur CommunityOur CommunityGeneral Discuss...General Discuss...Commercial Module version released killed DNN for 19 days!Commercial Module version released killed DNN for 19 days!


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