why migrate from Microsoft ASP to Microsoft .NET
A few months ago I linked to an article in a local paper which mentioned that one of Australia's largest e-tailers was still running on Microsoft ASP and SQL 7. Nothing at all wrong with that, as far as I'm concerned - plenty of businesses out there are happily running on even 20 year-old technology. The challenge for vendors, though, is to make the new technology compelling enough to create a business justification for organisations to upgrade their infrastructure.
Today one of the developers at this e-tailer, Paul, posted a comment making the point that “any form of radical technology shift is going to require a pretty compelling business case to justify the expense (and, in the case of the SQL 7 -> SQL 2000 migration, it's a fairly enormous expense)“ and letting me know that they are “doing pretty amazing things with the old technology“ and I'm sure he's right on this last point. The folks at Wishlist are a very smart bunch who have a great site and an even better business model. Let's face it - any “dot com“ who survived the crunch are smarter than your average bear.
So anyway, I was wondering - what business justification have other organisations have used to migrate from ASP to ASP.NET or from SQL7 to SQL 2000? Is it compelling enough? Do we need to do more to either make the new technology compelling or to communicate the more compelling features of the new technologies? Is it really to do with price? Or with the cost and complexity of the migration?
Comments
- Anonymous
April 05, 2004
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
April 06, 2004
This is probably from the "well, duh" department, but why not talk to the customer and see what kind of problems they have with the current setup? Or what functionality their staff would really like to have?
If the cost of fixing those problems and adding new functions is lower than the cost of migration, then it's pretty much a done deal. - Anonymous
April 08, 2004
Alex - yeah I havent had a chance to spend time with these guys of late, but I don't think they have any serious defined problems with their current setup. They seem to be pretty happy with the way things are working.