Wow, brings back lots of memories. In high school I got started writing VB3 for my father's small software development company. I'd end up working full-time there for a handful of years after college, really pushing the boundaries of what one could do with Visual Basic. I don't think there's a single tool or language that I've loved more than it in my entire career.
Twenty-seven years later, still one of my proudest accomplishments is to have had a multi-year project that I worked on featured in "Visual Basic Programmer's Journal".
Twenty-seven years later, still one of my proudest accomplishments is to have had a multi-year project that I worked on featured in "Visual Basic Programmer's Journal".