<div><div><div style="float:right"><img alt ="" src="http://images.pageglimpse.com/v1/thumbnails?devkey=82c14bf10b5f9d544e78661ac2d355d2&amp;url=http://codeclimber.net.nz/archive/2009/03/23/asp.net-mvc-for-ror-developers-do-as-locals-do.aspx&amp;size=small&amp;root=no&amp;nothumb=http://dotnetshoutout.com/Assets/Images/pg-preview-na.jpg"/></div><div>A few days ago, Simon Tokumine, a Ruby On Rails developer from UK who had to build a web app using, as he calls it, .NET MVC (ASP.NET MVC as we usually calls it), wrote a nice post that makes a comparison between RoR and ASP.NET MVC.

Actually it was not really a comparison, more a “ASP.NET MVC for RoR developers” kind of post He was a foreigner that came into the .NET country and visited the city called ASP.NET MVC, and he gave his opinion on his first...</div></div><div style="padding-top:4px"><a rev="vote-for" href="http://dotnetshoutout.com/ASPNET-MVC-for-RoR-developers-do-as-locals-do-Simone-Chiaretta"><img alt="Shout it" src="http://dotnetshoutout.com/image.axd?url=http%3a%2f%2fcodeclimber.net.nz%2farchive%2f2009%2f03%2f23%2fasp.net-mvc-for-ror-developers-do-as-locals-do.aspx" style="border:0px"/></a></div></div>.