![]() If you want to work for startups then focus on technologies popular with them, which tend to not use the Microsoft stack. In general C#, ASP.NET and the Windows platform are more popular in the Enterprise crowd, not so much for startups. In which case, as others already stated, it really depends upon if the companies using these technologies are ones that you want to work for. My read of your post that you are focusing on the first option, to help landing a job. Are you looking to get a job from this learning investment? Are you trying to broaden your knowledge by seeing how different technologies solve different problems? Are you just looking around to mess around with something new for the fun of it? Whether it is 'worth it' is dependent upon what you want to achieve. I know I may not be viewing things correctly but what's your opinion on Microsoft's tech stack (including any service which I have listed and/or missed).ĭo you think new developers and the college or university or even mid aged developers should invest their time into microsoft stack in 2018 onwards? Other testing and management VS tools which I ignored above.NET stack, I find C# more faster and easy to deploy than slow RAM hanging java code. And Azure is not really worth it after 12 months of free service as the usage prices rise quickly compared to other cloud hosting platforms. The reason being Dot net core is not matured yet to deploy on say digitalocean and other cloud platforms. I find azure platform extremely expensive for developers who want to build on side projects. PHP and even node with express is much cheaper and maintainable over ASP. I don't see why any company would still want to invest in this. There are few desktop based application making use of it but Node and Electron can pretty much replace it.Ĭonsidering how expensive the ASP.net is still today in 2018 compared to PHP. It's very strong but often tied to Windows server. Though VB.net still has takers in context of those legacy application who don't want to make use of the Java for desktop. Very few desktop applications are surviving the mobile and cloud migration. ![]() Let me break down my concerns about Microsoft's tech stack.
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