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.NET 10

(devblogs.microsoft.com)
489 points runesoerensen | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.494s | source
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jitbit ◴[] No.45888669[source]
For us, every .NET upgrade since .NET 5 has gone surprisingly smoothly and reduced CPU/RAM usage by 10–15%.

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.

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masfoobar ◴[] No.45899235[source]
I think the "confusing" aspect with C#, being part of the Microsoft eco-system, is that there are many smaller companies (and startups) that may have concern paying for such tools.

To the uneducated, C# is linked to Visual Studio.. the IDE.. and the Community edition if free as long as you are a student, open-source, and individuals. Professional and Enterprise are paid.

(Yes - there is Visual Studio Code)

Again, I am looking at this from the uneducated. With the above, as well as "going with other Microsoft products" things start to get more expensive. Need a database - should it be SQL Server? Should it be Windows Servers? etc.

Because of the above, I would not be surprised if Go is more popular especially for startups... alongside Linux, MySQL/Postgres, as well as other IDE or text editors. Sure.. I might agree that Visual Studio Code is suited for various programmers today.

Not suggesting you are wrong in any way. It's just the amount of money spent on Windows/Microsoft for small companies is rather large, compared to other alternatives that are just as good.

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1. tracker1 ◴[] No.45905121[source]
Silly me, using Rider (and VS Code) on Linux with C# (FastEndpoints and Dapper) with PostgreSQL...

Now the above is personal preference, while my day job is on Windows (also FE/Dapper) but with MS-SQL, which is because another group does DBA. I'm using VS Code for the work stuff though.