Yesterday I was using Claude Desktop MCP for the first time in a couple weeks, and noticed the conversation cutoff was extremely short, with no option to "continue" given. I did a websearch to confirm my bias, and found this video recorded 3 days prior.
how timely. a few days ago I had a meeting with two non-technical founders wanting to make some cloud based finance software.
The double whammy, is that with the powers of ChatGPT on their side, they honestly thought they figured out the big architecture problems and were very unhappy at me pushing back at their design decisions. They wanted me to validate their ideas, not ask what the core user scenarios were (to figure out what tech was needed for an MVP)
I broke the bone that runs along the top of your left foot when I was around 20 (Metatarsal Bone?), about 25 years ago.
Being a stupid youngun, I didn't go to the doctor, thinking that it was just a really bad sprain, and I could "walk it off".
It really really hurt but I tried to walk (even run) normally on it, and gradually over months the pain subsided until maybe 6 months later it was "normal".
Except, maybe 10 years later I noticed that I couldn't balance on my left foot as well as on the right, and see that the top of my foot is noticeably less convex (not quite concave though). Probably less structure for muscles and tendons to use for stability. But feels fine and I can walk and run okay :D
FYI, You are comparing the modern version of DotNet (the first link) with the old legacy version (the second link).
The modern version of DotNet, "Net Core" is effectively a reboot of DotNet, with a very cross platform focus and redesigned API's based on decades of experience.
The impressive thing between .NET Framework (original .NET) and .NET now (rebooted as .NET Core but now dropped the “Core”) in that they largely foxed the API while leaving almost all of it intact.
Library code you wrote in C# 10 years before .NET Core will often just compile and run. Even more than code the resides developer learning. The plumbing between ASP.NET MVC (old) and ASP.NET Core (new) was completely and radically different. Yet writing an application in it was very much the same.
The first link appears to be for .NET Standard, which has a common API compatible with both Framework and Core.
Though it might be worth checking Github to find example usages of the APIs. Maybe there's even some libraries that improve the developer experience with cryptography.
More detail isn't necessarily better. I own some property and this water map repeats the same seasonal streams that exist on the state's (very old) records.
they should validate with satellite data or something similar.
I think it's a strange argument: that buying a truck is "worse" than buying a sports car. I think the term "apples and oranges" is applicable here. The former are both vehicles and the latter are both fruit, but otherwise have fairly different cost/benefit.