.NET developer here. Been developing mainly in C# and WPF for the past three years. Used C++ and Python for a few things (OCR and GIS stuff), but bread and butter has been .NET-involved. I dabbled in
ASP.NET MVC, but haven't used it in any of my work projects yet. I enjoy C# as a language and .NET is tolerable. WPF has an incredibly steep learning curve, but I forced myself to learn it in under a month to a professional-working level with little to no sleep to get my current gig. I enjoy the flexibility of WPF, but it has a few annoying bugs that Microsoft showed no interest in fixing (they literally told me that), so that upsets me.
I have Associate of Science in Computer Science and Associate of Science in Math & Science, and I'm currently working on my Bachelor of Science in Computer Science at CSUSB.
I'm joining this community to better myself as a developer. While being able to use ready frameworks to quickly cook up some software that's due by some ridiculous deadline is great and all, it always leaves me wanting. I want more control over my product and I don't always have that with my current tools. I haven't had time to follow Casey's videos closely (although I'm doing that now), but I have glanced at them once in a while since the day he started streaming. He has made remarkable progress and has created things in C that make me believe that with enough time and energy invested into learning how to create things from scratch, I will have the necessary skills not to rely on any existing frameworks anymore (or at least be able to supplement them if needed). Anyways... that's the hope, but we'll see.
Lastly, I'm very agnostic when it comes to the field of technology. Linux, Windows, JavaScript, Python, C#, whatever... I honestly don't care. I admire those who are passionate about their cause (in a technological context) and those who have created all these 'tools'. Many bash things like Java and while I stopped using it for enterprise reasons, I can't speak poorly of it --- when I create something better on my own, maybe then I'll have the right (even then I probably won't... but hopefully you understand what I mean).