The Bitwarden security team identified and contained a malicious package that was briefly distributed through the npm delivery path for @bitwarden/cli@2026.4.0 between 5:57 PM and 7:30 PM (ET) on April 22, 2026, in connection with a broader Checkmarx supply chain incident. Was I affected? If you use the Bitwarden command line interface and deploy using NPM, and downloaded the CLI between 5:57p ET and 7:30p ET on April 22, 2026, you may be affected. See remediation steps below. If you do not u...
Probably more worth than it was 15 years ago since you’re no longer restricted to Windows and it’s now open source. I’ve heard a lot of people say it’s nicer than Spring for enterprise stuff. Haven’t tried it much myself though. Was fairly easy to set up a simple API, but I then got distracted by other projects.
Yes, it’s incredibly nice, versatile, powerful and efficient. Me being a .net dev since first beta. That said it’s still a GC based runtime if that matters to you. I’m also looking more and more at kotlin as an alternative. If I was to look for a non GC language, I’d go with rust.
Do you feel its still worth learning now?
Probably more worth than it was 15 years ago since you’re no longer restricted to Windows and it’s now open source. I’ve heard a lot of people say it’s nicer than Spring for enterprise stuff. Haven’t tried it much myself though. Was fairly easy to set up a simple API, but I then got distracted by other projects.
Yes, it’s incredibly nice, versatile, powerful and efficient. Me being a .net dev since first beta. That said it’s still a GC based runtime if that matters to you. I’m also looking more and more at kotlin as an alternative. If I was to look for a non GC language, I’d go with rust.
I have been wanting to get into coding for fun again and do some pet projects. Bit of a paralysis from choice.
Go with either kotlin or c#, I’d say. Both are high level and easy to start with. If you don’t have a preference, pick one of the two randomly.