We were even able to downgrade our cloud servers to smaller instances, literally.
I wish .NET was more popular among startups, if only C# could get rid of the "enterpisey" stigma.
We were even able to downgrade our cloud servers to smaller instances, literally.
I wish .NET was more popular among startups, if only C# could get rid of the "enterpisey" stigma.
I personally won't be using it, given the choice, again. I don't like exceptions, but can live with them. I don't like null, but can live with it. Nuget is complete and utter garbage. You still have to resort to all forms of unreliable hacks in order to redirect it to a locally clone (and if you do use a feed to avoid that, good luck with getting the local cache to not be completely moronic).
(Look, it certainly didn't help that the project itself was heavily enterprisey because the developers hadn't kicked those habits)
What exactly does this mean? I haven't touched .NET in earnest in over 10 years. I know the ecosystem has evolved a lot since then, but I don't know how or in what ways