I'm having another of these "Could not load file or assembly or one of its dependencies" problems.
Additional information: Could not load
file or assembly
'Microsoft.Practices.Unity,
Version=1.2.0.0, Culture=neutral,
PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35' or
one of its dependencies. The l...
I've long run a few dozen websites in Azure and while I've long noticed people (frankly) wasting money by having one Azure App Service (a Web Site) per Azure App Service Plan (a VM) I tend to pack them tight. A Basic 1 (B1) Azure App Service running Linux is around $13 a month but has nearly 2 gigs of RAM. Up that to about $26 a month and you've got 3.5 gigs of RAM and 2 Cores AND 10 gigs of …
>walking around Coeurbane >see a busty woman passing by >she beckons to you "hey c'mere" >you hesitantly go in her direction >she pulls an unactivated glowstick out of her cleavage >she winks and says "come to the rave"
to me a rave is where people are in a big open area listening to trance or some other europop beat...they don't speak any words to each other and it's the kind of party where nobody talks about it, like fight club
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@Freerey I read an article about featureManagement Library, it says "Feature flags build on top of the .NET Core configuration system" what does it mean it has been built on .NET Core configuration system?
As Microsoft.FeatureManagement is built on top of the configuration system, it can be controlled by any of the various configuration providers available. That means you can control features from an appsettings.json file, from environment variables, from a database, or from any number of other providers. Enabling and disabling features simply requires changing values in one of your configuration providers.