All,
I used to work for the software division of one company (which used BC2), and have since moved on to another company. I am now arguing my case for getting BC3 at the new company to speed up the efficiency of some of our development tasks.
Not too long from now, I will have to go up in front of the entire building and argue my case. One point that I know I will be gutted on, is "why BC and not some other free tool, such as Meld". (we work in both a windows and Linux environment).
I have come up with some of my own arguments for BC, listing features not commonly found in other diff tools (such as replacements, reports generation, manual realignment, etc), but was wondering if there was an official list somewhere or if anyone can help me compile a list of the strengths in BC that you can't find in other alternatives.
Thanks!
Justin
I used to work for the software division of one company (which used BC2), and have since moved on to another company. I am now arguing my case for getting BC3 at the new company to speed up the efficiency of some of our development tasks.
Not too long from now, I will have to go up in front of the entire building and argue my case. One point that I know I will be gutted on, is "why BC and not some other free tool, such as Meld". (we work in both a windows and Linux environment).
I have come up with some of my own arguments for BC, listing features not commonly found in other diff tools (such as replacements, reports generation, manual realignment, etc), but was wondering if there was an official list somewhere or if anyone can help me compile a list of the strengths in BC that you can't find in other alternatives.
Thanks!
Justin
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