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Hey friend, Last week I wrote a full .NET 10 Web API by hand. It worked great. But I kept thinking… Can I build the same thing faster with AI? So I tried. And wow. The result blew my mind. In my new YouTube video, I show you the exact workflow I used with GitHub Copilot to build a full API. Step by step. Real code. No fluff. If you ever thought things like:
Then this video is for you. Hope you enjoy it. Take care, Patrick P.S. Want to really master .NET web development with AI + Copilot? Click here. |
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Hey Reader, At lunch the other day, a colleague looked at my Copilot setup and said: "It's basically just a batch file, right? You write a script once and run it on demand." And I had to stop and think. Because that's actually a pretty good analogy. But it's also missing something crucial. A batch file doesn't read your codebase before it runs. It doesn't know your handlers use a custom base class. It doesn't know you're on minimal APIs. AI Skills do. In 13 minutes, you'll see a full vertical...
Hey friend, I realized something recently: AI was slowing me down. I’d send a prompt… and wait. Even though I already knew what to do next. So I changed one thing. I stopped using AI like a tool and started using it like a team. Multiple chats. Multiple tasks. All running at once. Watch it below 👇 Happy prompting! Take care,Patrick P.S. If you want help setting this up for your workflow or your team, click here.
Hey friend, Blazor Server or WebAssembly? Lately, I had a call with a student migrating a desktop app… and this question came up immediately. So I made a quick video to break it down: You'll learn: When Blazor Server is the simplest choice When you actually need WebAssembly And when an API becomes necessary Enjoy! Take care,Patrick P.S. Our next live office hours inside the .NET Web Academy start tomorrow. Join here.