I\'ve been developing in MS technologies for longer than I care to remember at this stage. When .NET arrived on the scene I thought they hit the nail on the head and with ea
The concerns you listed were:
here's my take:
(1) addressed a valid concern that customers had with ASMX. It was too wide-open, with no way to easily control it. The 8k limit is easily lifted if you know where to look. I guess you can count that as a surprise, but it's more of a one-time thing. Once you know about it, you can lift it and be done with it forever, if you choose.
(2) is also configurable.
(3) is known, but there are boilerplate ways to work around this. The StockTrader code for example, demonstrates a proven pattern. You can re-use the code in your own app. Not sure if this is fixed in WCF for .NET 4.0. I know it was an open request.
(4) The config is a beast. This is a concern for a lot of people. The problem here is that WCF is so flexible, and config of all of that flexibility is exposed through xml files. It can be overwhelming. An approach that seems to work is to take it in small bites, as you need it.
(5) I don't understand.