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le-marktoday at 9:15 PM7 repliesview on HN

I used to see some excitement around .net core several years ago. I haven’t heard or seen much in the wild. Is anyone using .net on systems other than windows nowadays?


Replies

dgellowtoday at 9:18 PM

It’s huge in the game dev world, with Unity and Godot. .net also had a reasonable community on mobile for a while thanks to Xamarin, but I cannot imagine that many people using it for new mobile projects in 2026 (outside of game dev I mean).

It’s a very decent language (I mean C#) and runtime, I wish it had more market share in the startup world.

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lol768today at 9:40 PM

Yes; many (Alpine/Debian) containers in K8s on GKE for production rail ticketing infra in the UK.

There's not tons of noise being made because for the most part it all, Just Works and that's fairly boring. Perf, memory usage etc gets better every release. As an ecosystem, I'm pretty happy with it. I reach for other languages for smaller microservices.

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bel8today at 9:38 PM

I consulted for multiple enterprise C# projects in the last 5 years. At least two of them are 1mil+ lines of code each.

All of them run in Linux servers.

Some of them were ported from PHP and Python to C#.

Plus LLMs thrive in strongly typed languages.

Which means C# will keep being very strong in enterprise too. Not only in games where it reigns a large chunk of the market share.

forgotaccount3today at 9:22 PM

Yes, lambda's and our dev's use mac's so it enables that. We deploy some apps to some unix based server as well but the company is mostly windows servers anyway.

yreadtoday at 9:23 PM

Wwwuuuuuaaahhhhh! (making a big wild excited noise using asp.net core exclusively on Linux servers since 2017)

b65e8bee43c2ed0today at 9:31 PM

it was an obvious marketing campaign. back then core and blazor were shilled relentlessly, and the artificial excitement died the moment MS moved on to shill vscode and typescript.

companies spend a lot on marketing, and it's not just ads.