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Look at some job descriptions of some cool companies facebook/google... Do you see a simple word being related with windows technologies?



I shouldn't feed a troll but, look at job descriptions from banks/insurance companies/science/education/betting/automative/health based companies. Do you see a simple word being related to rails?

ps: I know of some that do, most don't, and they pay a LOT more than all the 'cool' companies.


> ps: I know of some that do, most don't, and they pay a LOT more than all the 'cool' companies.

That's fine if you are working for the money. Personally, I prefer the "cool" companies, even if they pay less. For some people, wearing a tie and spending 40 years working for a big bank or large insurance company and then retiring is an option and I respect them. It's not for everyone, however.


What is so 'cool' about those companies though? Not trolling.

Google -> Adsense are their main profit and from where the real top dogs go, the rest work in projects that most of the time go to the crapper. A lot of their big name projects are based on C++. Facebook -> No idea, but they were using PHP and C++ right? (sorry, I don't follow much of FB engineering)

While I don't want to piss on Rails or Django or whatever, I've hardly seen a lot of companies that do use them to be working on really cool projects (and not another CRUD app for social horse riders to exchange organic cucumbers (hyperbole)). A lot of the 'cool' stuff that is happening in our world seems to be coming from more fringe languages (R, Julia, Haskell, Scala, F#) or old mainstream (C, C++, C#, Java) than the Ruby/NodeJS camp. If we go mobile, then we are even talking have to acknowledge both mainstream languages to develop are Java and a superset dialect of C - Objective C.

So honestly, if you take the beer and ping pong tables out of the equation, what are the advantages of these self-entitled cool companies over the others? (Btw, most big companies have pool tables, table tennis, gyms, beer, wine, XBoxes etc as much or more than the startups, they just don't post pictures of them on their blogs).


I've worked for many companies as a developer in an MS stack. I've never had a dress code that required more than a t shirt.


So, you disagree with the "wearing a tie" part?


I disagree with all of it except for your preference. I think cool companies can write in .net


The other day I had a meeting with some folks in a company that uses .NET and the CEO showed up in a gym shirt, shorts and sports shoes. You're conflating the technology with the places it's typically used, there are places that use RoR where everyone wears a tie.


Because they are built on Linux?

Fair few good companies built on .net

Stackoverflow for one.

I agree they tend to be hidden behind the scenes companies. But those companies can be nice companies to work for(Sane work hours, good benefits, not expected to work overtime etc).


> Stackoverflow for one.

That's no longer completely true. While the core continues to run on Windows, SQL Server and .NET, pretty much everything around it is Linux-based and without that additions, the system would be unable to maintain its current performance.


As far i'm aware that's the caching software. .NET is performant(And probably faster) than the common open source platforms like python, php, ruby.

Any platform would have problems without caching.


I remember they had to patch the OpenSSL bug so they are not using IIS for the SSL endpoint.


[Blizzard Entertainment uses .NET](http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/careers/posting.html?id...)

Unless you don't consider Blizzard a cool company. Not to mention Microsoft itself.


None of those companies look for specific technologies either, they just look for aptitude, intelligence/analytical ability which you obviously lack.




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