.NET 5 preview 8 has been released:

https://github.com/dotnet/core/releases/tag/v5.0.0-preview.8

If you want to use .NET 5 Preview 8 with Visual Studio, make sure you have the Visual Studio 2019 16.8 preview 2 release installed].

Speaking of Visual Studio 2019 16.8 Preview 2, it now supports editor config fileheaders and namespace settings. So if your company has a 1980s centric approach to file-headers, you can now offload that work to the editorconfig.

ASP.NET Core 5 Preview 8 has been released.

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/aspnet/asp-net-core-updates-in-net-5-preview-8/

Lots of Blazor updates and improvements, as well as ASP.NET Core now supports Model binding and validation for C# 9 Record types.

Entity Framework Core 5 Preview 8 has been released:

They fixed a metric ton of bugs, and there are a lot of small features that may interest you.

F# 5 Preview 8 is out

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/f-5-update-for-august/

F# 5 now includes String Interpolation; a la what C# has had for a few releases now. F# 5 now also includes complete nameof implementation support, and more.

Is it .NET 5? Is it ASP.NET Core 5? Is it ASP.NET 5?

Jon Galloway gives us the answer:

ASP.NET Core name stays - you'll either see "ASPNET Core running on .NET 5" (blog post link) or "ASPNET Core 5".

Npgsql update for EFCore 5 Preview 8 has been released:

https://github.com/npgsql/efcore.pg/releases/tag/v5.0.0-preview8

I'm really glad people are pinning to the version of .NET Core they support. It's hard to keep up otherwise.

Is Blazor the future of development?

https://ilikekillnerds.com/2020/08/is-blazor-the-future-of-development/

Short answer: No, it's not going to replace JavaScript, but it will give the "We're a Microsoft shop, we use what Microsoft supports" crowd an adoption path for their aging Webforms implementations.

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