If you mostly live in .NET, the Java platform can look like a parallel universe: JVM, JDK, JARs, app servers, bytecode. The useful shortcut is to map each concept back to something you already know from C# and the CLR. This guide is a translation layer for .NET developers: what the JVM is, how the JDK compares to the .NET SDK, and what your real options are when a C# system needs to work with Java
Dapper vs. Entity Framework When building data-driven applications in .NET, two of the most popular data access technologies are Dapper and Entity Framework Core (EF Core). While both serve the same fundamental purpose—interacting with databases—they take very different approaches. Choosing between them depends heavily on your performance needs, development style, and project complexity. Let’s b
Most TypeScript teams shopping for an agent framework don't need one. A single generateObject call covers classification, extraction, summarization, tagging — the 80% case for production LLM work in TS right now. But once the model starts deciding what to do next, surviving deploys, or coordinating with other agents, you start shopping. And the moment you do, you discover the TS agent ecosystem is
All frameworks are eventually replaced. React is probably the first that won’t be. It's not the best language out there, it's not the language developers love the most, it's the language the robots just won't quit. Request ChatGPT to develop a todo app for you. You'll receive React. Request Copilot to generate the basic structure of a component. React. Request Claude to design a prototype for a da
My project is starting to get solid. I really like how it’s starting to look. Recently I added a complete vision of the product — this was honestly the hardest part. I’m trying to keep everything minimalistic. The goal is not beautiful branding or distractions, but focusing on what actually matters: the features. As I mentioned, here are the features: Capture HTTP requests & responses Inspect head
I spent the last few months building BlazOrbit, a component library for Blazor. It's not the first of its kind —MudBlazor, Radzen and Blazorise already exist— so I had to answer a hard question from the start: why does this need to exist? The answer turned out to be a set of architectural decisions I want to share, because each one taught me something about building UI frameworks that I didn't kno
If you're building an AI feature in .NET in 2026, the first framework you hear about is Microsoft Semantic Kernel. It's well-funded, actively maintained, and integrates deeply with Azure. For most projects, that's a fine starting point. But "fine for most" is not "right for all." Over the last few months we've talked to teams who started with Semantic Kernel and ended up looking for something else
Why I Stopped Using MediatR and Built CQRS From Scratch in .NET 10 MediatR is a great library. I'm not here to trash it. But when it moved to a paid model for commercial use, a lot of teams — including mine — had to make a decision. And the more I looked at what MediatR actually does under the hood, the more I realised: this is not complicated enough to justify an external dependency. So I built