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by powertower
4613 days ago
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I might have read too fast, and might have some serious bias here because I actually prefer C# and .NET over anything else (and like leaving performance issues to be dealt with caching / rather than introducing complexities) - but it seems like you went from using a familiar, predictable, and very popular stack to embracing a dozen different smaller and lesser known technologies all full of interoperability issues, idiosyncrasies, and each requiring very specific domain knowledge.... All because a single person at the top is ideological about OSS instead of practical about solutions. Though maybe that's what was required to get a buyout or merger, in which case that's what you needed to do due to the environment/culture of the other party... http://www.empathica.com/press-release/mindshare-technologie... |
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Scala enjoys all the benefits of JVM ecosystem, which is arguably more familiar, predictable and popular than C#/.NET. That and the incredibly rich selection of OSS libraries.