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Asked by tjgquicken in Web Languages/Standards, C# Programming Language, Java Programming Language
I have a web-based application that, when given a directory on a client's machine, finds all the files in that directory, compresses them, and uploads the compressed file to the server. It can also download a compressed file from the server and uncompress and restore it on the client's machine. Development on this project started seven years ago, so we're using some pretty outdated technology: most of the web interface is a C#/ASP.NET 1.1 application and the interface with the client's filesystem is handled by a Java applet (version 1.4.2). The interaction between the Java and .NET has caused me no end of grief, and I'd like to start working on a second version of the program that avoids all these issues.
My problem is that I'm not familiar with any other web-embeddable client-side language that (when digitally signed) can access a user's filesystem. It seems like Microsoft has a .NET language that can do this (not that I'm wedded to Microsoft or any particular technology), but I'm sort of lost in their mass of web acronyms: ADO.NET, COM, etc without much of an explanation of what any of them are. I'm hoping that someone can help me narrow the field and point me in the right direction.
Thanks a lot.
20090824-EE-VQP-74 / EE_QW_2_20070628