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Any tips on how to migrate a very large ASP.NET MVC app (framework 4.8), that is still in active development, with tens of thousands of users, without a complete feature-freeze? Am I able to migrate to .NET 7 in small increments over a long period?


We have a similar sounding app in terms of scale. We just bit the bullet and a couple of us spent a few weeks doing the upgrade in one branch while the rest of the team worked in another. We'd periodically merge in to the upgrade branch and tweak things as needed.

It wasn't too bad, really. Mostly it was updating any new controller methods to use the new attributes.

We originally planned to upgrade incrementally (one project at a time) but to be honest, it looked that was going to be far more fiddly and annoying that just doing the full thing.


The devblog had a post on something about that last year: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/incremental-asp-net-to...


New infections is not a very relevant metric at this point.


I sold a SaaS that was making around that amount in ARR. I used an M&A firm that was specialized in selling bootstrapped SaaS businesses. We ended up getting more than 10 offers which drove up the final price and allowed me to choose the best fit. I would have never been able to go through the process alone and get the multiples that we got offered.


I'm seeing some errors in my applications, but most requests are still working somehow.


Perhaps the errors are only partially logged. Since it's a DNS issue ( and potential DDOS)


Vegans actually tend to have higher testosterone: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2374537/pdf/83-...

“Vegans had 13% higher T [testosterone] concentration than meat-eaters and 8% higher than vegetarians.” Not only did vegan men have as much testosterone as meat eaters, they actually have 13% MORE of this manly hormone. On the flip side, too much testosterone can be a bad thing because it leads to higher levels of IGF-I – a risk factor for certain cancers. Surprisingly, the report also found this: “Vegan men had on average 9% lower IGF-I levels than meat-eaters.”


We are doing 200k+ in MRR and looking to move from Stripe because the cost is starting to hurt, and this change feels unfair. Our use-case is pretty simple (capture card and manage subscriptions) and we don't need all the features they have built in the last 5 years or are planing to build.

We are looking into Spreedly. Does anyone have other suggestions of Stripe alternatives that are not so expensive?


Have you negotiated with Stripe? Pretty much all of their pricing is negotiable.

Particularly if most of your customers are in the EU where interchange fees are capped at something like 0.3%, so their cost base is much lower.


I'm busy writing a Spreedly integration for my employer. It's not in production yet, but I can tell you that their iFrame API is a bit clumbsy and gives you less out of the box than Stripe Elements.


> The most part of diseases of this decade are caused by plant based diets.

I'm not sure if you are being serious. Approximately 3% of the US population claim to be 100% plant-based, and you are saying that this 3% is responsible for most part of diseases?


I'm sorry, what I wanted to say is: "The most diseases of this decade are caused by every kind of food that are not meat"


I practically stopped having headaches once I started using blue light blocking glasses. Not only at night, but when I first wake up too, specially if it's still dark.


I'm sure there are very rare exceptions, but if it's a simple product and it only takes 2 weeks to build it, it probably won't add that much value. If it does, the market is, or will be, saturated with competitors due to the low barrier to entry.


They acquired LastPass in 2015.


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