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Based on our record, ASP.NET should be more popular than RisingWave. It has been mentiond 22 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Most of the books teach C# and .NET, ASP.NET, Blazor, or T-SQL. I also found some .NET-specific coverage of wider topics: architecture and design, concurrency, automated tests, functional programming, and dependency injection. - Source: dev.to / about 2 months ago
Built by Microsoft, .NET is a high-performance application platform that uses C# for programming. .NET is cross-platform and comes with plenty of libraries and APIs covering collections, networking, and machine learning to build different types of applications. ASP.NET Core widens the .NET developer platform with libraries and tools geared towards web applications. - Source: dev.to / 9 months ago
Web Applications: ASP.NET, a powerful framework for building web applications, is primarily based on C#. Developers can create dynamic websites, web APIs, and services with ASP.NET. - Source: dev.to / 12 months ago
The Bold Reporting Tools ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET Web Forms will no longer be deployed in the embedded build. However, bug fixes are diligently transferred to our public repositories until Microsoft officially announces the end of support for these platforms. For new web application development or to stay up-to-date, Blazor or ASP.NET Core are recommended. - Source: dev.to / about 1 year ago
Sorry for the possibly dumb questions. But then does .NET 5 have a "Model View Controller" workflow? I'm seeing ASP.NET still exists. But it's just "ASP.NET", no "MVC" or "Core" attached to the end. And they seem to recommend Blazor instead of C# which is something I only know the name of. Source: about 2 years ago
RisingWave started as a distributed streaming database with a PostgreSQL interface. We wanted to make it easy to process real-time data using standard SQL. But we quickly realized that many teams don’t just want to process streaming data — they want to store it in a way that’s reusable by other tools downstream. - Source: dev.to / 22 days ago
This month (April 2025) marks 4 years and 1 month since I started building RisingWave. - Source: dev.to / 24 days ago
When we started RisingWave four years ago, we set out with a bold mission: to democratize stream processing (check our original blog here). Back then, building real-time streaming applications felt like climbing a mountain. It required specialized infrastructure, deep engineering know-how, and a hefty operational commitment. Stream processing had incredible potential, but its sheer complexity kept it locked away... - Source: dev.to / 27 days ago
RisingWave is a unified real-time data processing and management platform. It allows users to ingest, process, and query streaming data using familiar SQL. For this demonstration, we'll particularly leverage RisingWave's materialized views, which continuously and incrementally compute results as new data arrives, enabling real-time analysis without constant re-computation. Additionally, its Python SDK simplifies... - Source: dev.to / 27 days ago
Real-time pipelines might need RisingWave or Apache Kafka. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
Ruby on Rails - Ruby on Rails is an open source full-stack web application framework for the Ruby programming...
Materialize - A Streaming Database for Real-Time Applications
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines
Timeplus - An innovative streaming SQL database and real-time analytics platform. Fast, powerful and intuitive
Laravel - A PHP Framework For Web Artisans
Apache Flink - Flink is a streaming dataflow engine that provides data distribution, communication, and fault tolerance for distributed computations.