Subject: Re: Visual Studio 2003 - Developing on Remote Machine
Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 14:31:43 -0000
Dave
Dave Bush said:
Sounds odd to me. I could understand using 2003 if you are programming
for Sharepoint. But, I'd want VS on the 2003 virtual computer.
That's the setup that I have at the moment, but there are two problems with
this environment.
1. I work with two monitors, but neither VMWare nor VPC [to my knowledge]
supports dual monitors. There is a "workaround" for this involving starting
RDP from the command line using the "span" switch (roughly speaking, this is
from memory), then RDPing to the VM. This will span both monitors, but both
monitors are treated as a single wide monitor. This can be a bit annoying,
as dialogue boxes will often open up between the two monitors, and I assume
that there will be a further performance hit from the RDP session.
2. Everything seems to be running pretty slowly on the VM. "Pretty slowly"
is subjective, and I've only been using it for half a day, but it was
suggested to me that running VS on the host machine and connecting to the VM
would speed things up. I don't have enough knowledge about virtualisation to
know if this is the case.
[..]
I guess if it were me, I'd try to understand the reasoning behind this
first and then do a little arguing regarding how productive I won't be.
We have different clients, and we either need two development machines each
(if we work with two clients), or waste a load of time re-configuring
development environments. The thinking is that using VMs as development
environments means that we can just switch between VMs as and when we need
to. I think that in theory this is a good idea, but I'm now having doubts
about the practicalities.
If that doesn't work, and that's how they want you to spend your time,
then just go ahead and try to do it their way. You might learn
something in the process.
Indeed. The excercise is research-based anyway - I'm confident whatever my
findings are that they will be listened to. I just want to ensure that I can
back up any conclusions in a robust manner, and have followed every avenue.
Thanks again for the input.
Cheers!