What should I do?
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I'm a C# developer by profession and lately I've been using MVC3 with the Razor view engine. I currently don't have my own site and I'm planning on changing that. The thing is, I'm not really sure what technology I should go with. I have the option of sticking with C# and IIS7 which have made great strides in scalability and performance; or I could go with Java and Ruby on Rails with Apache which are known to be more versatile and scalable. My real questions are, does it matter much any more? Which one has more widespread usage? Which one is truly more scalable? Does one have a deciding factor over the other? I appreciate your input. :confused:
- Arcond
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I'm a C# developer by profession and lately I've been using MVC3 with the Razor view engine. I currently don't have my own site and I'm planning on changing that. The thing is, I'm not really sure what technology I should go with. I have the option of sticking with C# and IIS7 which have made great strides in scalability and performance; or I could go with Java and Ruby on Rails with Apache which are known to be more versatile and scalable. My real questions are, does it matter much any more? Which one has more widespread usage? Which one is truly more scalable? Does one have a deciding factor over the other? I appreciate your input. :confused:
- Arcond
At the end of the day, its your choice......what tech your familiar with, what you are going to do with it, cost, maintainability etc. etc. Me, i am just fine and dandy with iis as the server, mysql as the backend, a smattering of joomla cms, a hint of asp.net, a touch of phpbb and thats about it for the moment :)
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
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I'm a C# developer by profession and lately I've been using MVC3 with the Razor view engine. I currently don't have my own site and I'm planning on changing that. The thing is, I'm not really sure what technology I should go with. I have the option of sticking with C# and IIS7 which have made great strides in scalability and performance; or I could go with Java and Ruby on Rails with Apache which are known to be more versatile and scalable. My real questions are, does it matter much any more? Which one has more widespread usage? Which one is truly more scalable? Does one have a deciding factor over the other? I appreciate your input. :confused:
- Arcond
I'm fine with C#, ASP.Net and JQuery does everything I need but I don't do sites for a living.
Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^]
www.jaxcoder.com[^] WinHeist - Windows Electronic Inventory SysTem -
At the end of the day, its your choice......what tech your familiar with, what you are going to do with it, cost, maintainability etc. etc. Me, i am just fine and dandy with iis as the server, mysql as the backend, a smattering of joomla cms, a hint of asp.net, a touch of phpbb and thats about it for the moment :)
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
...and a partridge in a pair tree ;P
I know the language. I've read a book. - _Madmatt
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I'm a C# developer by profession and lately I've been using MVC3 with the Razor view engine. I currently don't have my own site and I'm planning on changing that. The thing is, I'm not really sure what technology I should go with. I have the option of sticking with C# and IIS7 which have made great strides in scalability and performance; or I could go with Java and Ruby on Rails with Apache which are known to be more versatile and scalable. My real questions are, does it matter much any more? Which one has more widespread usage? Which one is truly more scalable? Does one have a deciding factor over the other? I appreciate your input. :confused:
- Arcond
If you are planning to use this site to highlight your talents then you should use the technology you want to highlight your talents in.
I know the language. I've read a book. - _Madmatt
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...and a partridge in a pair tree ;P
I know the language. I've read a book. - _Madmatt
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Is a pair tree a bit like a HashTable? I always thought it was a pear tree, or is this the code project version :) p.s. Never tried a partridge and don't like pears. X|
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
DaveAuld wrote:
Is a pair tree a bit like a HashTable?
or a typo, but pair tree does should better here :laugh:
I know the language. I've read a book. - _Madmatt
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I'm a C# developer by profession and lately I've been using MVC3 with the Razor view engine. I currently don't have my own site and I'm planning on changing that. The thing is, I'm not really sure what technology I should go with. I have the option of sticking with C# and IIS7 which have made great strides in scalability and performance; or I could go with Java and Ruby on Rails with Apache which are known to be more versatile and scalable. My real questions are, does it matter much any more? Which one has more widespread usage? Which one is truly more scalable? Does one have a deciding factor over the other? I appreciate your input. :confused:
- Arcond