Visual Source Safe and CVS in the late 1990s

This is amusing as the company I worked at in the late 90s and early aughts had the same problem. The Microsoft projects all used Visual Source Safe which had poor multi-developer abilities. It shared code poorly and often caused as many problems as it solved.

By contrast, the Java projects and projects in other languages went on the CVS server, which didn't have the same restrictions as Visual SourceSafe and was far superior.

The Microsoft developers didn't switch over, it is too easy to remain in the Microsoft stack as the whole Visual Studio productivity and mindset is a lot easier if you don't rock the boat and use outside technologies.

The anecdote that reminded me of this:

In the late 1990s I worked at Creature Labs. We were changing from Visual SourceSafe (commercial, made by Microsoft) to CVS (open source, made by a bunch of hippies).

There was frankly disbelief that it could do its main magical promise - let multiple people edit the same file at the same time, and be able to flawlessly merge their changes together without breaking anything.

The exclusive locking of SourceSafe was a real problem when we were making Creatures 3. I remember a particular occasion we were adding garbage collection which meant editing most code files, and the lead programmer had to check out every file exclusively over the weekend while he implemented it.

More recently I put my next generation version of my blog up on github so I can play with some of the new technologies like Wicket. It is amazing how far software development has come in just over a decade.
Permalink, Visual Source Safe and CVS in the late 1990s, Dec 2011, cam

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