.NET

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We're heading to Build 2016!

Emily Parish

We are heading to Moscone in San Francisco. Yes, for DevNation in June, but we are there for Microsoft Build 2016 this week. We’ve got many exciting things planned - some below and some you will need to wait and see - but as a first time sponsor of Build we are looking forward to welcoming the .NET audience to Red Hat Developers. All the details are here but here are some of the highlights: Red Hat Developers team will...

12 Top blog articles of 2015
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12 Top blog articles of 2015 - don't miss these

Mike Guerette

Another December and another list of must-read blog articles for the year. These were the most read and averaged 16,000 views per article - so lots of interest! Scala vs. Node.js as a RESTful backend server (31000 views) Improving math performance in glibc Red Hat and Microsoft making .NET on Linux work for Enterprises Five different ways to handle leap seconds with NTP JIT-compilation using GCC 5 GCC5 and the C++11 ABI GCC 5 in Fedora Live Migrating QEMU-KVM Virtual...

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Red Hat and Microsoft making .NET on Linux work for Enterprises

Harry Mower

Today is a pretty exciting day if you’re an enterprise developer. . . Red Hat and Microsoft have announced that the two companies will be working together to bring a supported version of the .NET runtime to Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux and OpenShift 3. This offers developers more freedom and choice in how they develop their applications. Having spent a big part of my career at Microsoft and working with .NET since its inception, I’ve grown to love the strengths...

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.Net gets open sourced

Harry Mower

There was a time, not so long ago, when enterprise software development was pretty straight forward. For most, there were few choices – Java or .Net, Linux or Windows, a handful of databases and IT ran everything. Today, it’s anything but straight forward. There are dozens of languages, dozens of ways to host and deliver your applications, different client technologies, some proprietary and some not… there are a lot of decisions to make. When there were limited choices, developers usually...