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Microsoft's Jay Schmelzer discusses the .NET Framework and how developers can build modern apps for the BYOD world, either using Microsoft tools or those from partners.
Posted on 05/23/2013
"The most disruptive change we are making in this release is dropping support for .NET Framework."
Microsoft shipped the first release candidate for .NET 9, which is nearing feature completeness and production readiness in advance of its November debut.
The company urges devs to switch to Windows App SDK and WinUI 3 because UWP is no longer under active development.
The Angular web-dev framework might seem an odd choice for a Microsoft-centric developer to consider, seeing as it's championed by arch-rival Google, but a closer look reveals many advantages.
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