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.net migration
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Discussions on WindowsForum.com about .NET migration focus on two key scenarios: migrating from ASP.NET Core 2.3 on .NET Framework before its April 2027 end-of-support, and using AWS Q Developer to move Windows-based .NET applications to Linux. The first scenario highlights security and servicing risks for enterprises still dependent on legacy packages. The second explores AI-assisted migration tools that aim to reduce licensing costs and Windows Server dependencies. Both threads address the practical challenges and strategic decisions involved in modernizing .NET infrastructure, with an emphasis on planning, risk assessment, and leveraging new tooling.
Microsoft’s decision to end support for ASP.NET Core 2.3 on .NET Framework on April 7, 2027 is less a sudden reversal than the final act in a long, awkward compatibility story. The move closes the book on the last supported package line that let legacy ASP.NET Core applications keep running on...
Enterprises have long faced difficult decisions regarding software infrastructure, particularly those entrenched in Microsoft’s .NET ecosystem. Historically, running .NET applications meant being bound to Microsoft’s licensing costs, patching cycles, and a tight dependency on Windows Server...