• @[email protected]
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    3110 months ago

    Imagine being such a niche language that a single job posting makes headlines. In another 10.000 maybe I’ll be able to get a Rust job too.

    • @[email protected]
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      3710 months ago

      It’s less the job post, more the implication, that they consider Rust to be better than (their internally developed) C# for one of their major products. And that I think is worth news (as it could further drive towards adoption of Rust in general).

    • @redempt
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      1510 months ago

      the news isn’t that there’s one job listing, the news is that Microsoft office 365 is being rewritten in rust.

    • Ephera
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      2710 months ago

      The actual job posting says:

      We are forming a new team focused on enabling the adoption of the Rust programming language as the foundation to modernizing global scale platform services, and beyond.

      So, it doesn’t sound to me like they’ll actively port everything. I imagine, they don’t yet know where the journey is really headed, but probably have a need for performance-critical software to be rewritten in Rust.

      Well, and yeah, it’s going to be a team and they’re only really going to maybe port one or two services, to figure out what technologies work well.

      • .:\dGh/:.
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        310 months ago

        I suspect they will port core software running on the cloud first, running C# and chomping tops of RAM and CPU because reasons. Rust helps with both, but it takes time to port. Frontend apps will be the last thing will bring to Rust, maybe using WASM, and to avoid tools, use the same WASM packaged with Chromium for their standalone “apps” and walá: one codebase, all platforms.

        • kus
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          110 months ago

          That’s the really nice thing about a subscription model the way jetbrains puts it you don’t have to keep moving the chairs on the deck or keep shuffling the UI elements around to get a steady revenue. I am sure moving to rust will help Microsoft cut its cloud / azure cost I mean at some point it costs Microsoft money even though it owns azure.

      • qaz
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        10 months ago

        I’m guessing it’s for large enterprise customers. Microsoft provides it as a service so they have to deal with scaling and the hosting. Rust can help improve performance on these large systems were it counts and can reduce hosting costs.