If the Mono project is successful it will pave the way for commercial software on non-Windows platforms.
I am interested in the prospect of writing and selling commercial software for the Mono platform along the lines of our existing Smoke Vector Graphics (OCaml) and F# for Visualization (.NET) products. Are any commercial library developers already building upon Mono and, if so, are they turning a profit from it?
Also, will it be feasible to write the software in Microsoft’s F# language or will Mono have trouble with ILX?
My figures speak against it, we developed Qide 10 years ago and got 4 or so buys. We got at least a few hundred time more on Windows. The state of tools on Linux can just be named bad. Agreed you have wonderful things there but if you use GPLd software you will drown in their license stuff. There does exist one debugger really and one C compiler it gdb and gcc, despite the efforts of Intel and if you come along into some less well known language you got nothing. Ever tried ProjectCenter (Objective C development environment)? , the debuggers are mostly clis and you have to type info reg to get info about registers. DDD works very funny, it’s one tools that while scrolling did not get that right, you scroll up you have to scroll the mouse wheel down. It’s also unbelievable slow to scroll it’s just as if the BOFH wants to make a joke of you.
Well I could argue about the even sader state on IBM AIX. What you have to pay to IBM is way beyond any reason…
So maybe you’re luckier than we are. But I’m mostly fed up with trying to earn money with ‘application’ development on Linux. The best I can say is that Linux works well for setting up net infrastructure, there you got decent payments, but with programming tools, forget it.
Regards