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About twice a month I get asked to justify the reason "Why are we using ASP.NET and not PHP or Java, or buzz-word-of-the-month-here, etc".

100% of the time the questions come from people that do not understand anything about technology. People that would not know the difference between FTP and HTTP.

The best approach I found (so far) to justify it to people without getting into technical details is to just say "XXX website uses it". Which I get back "Oh...I did not know that, so ASP.NET must be good".

I know, I know, it hurts. But it works.

So, without getting into the merit of why I'm using ASP.NET (which could trigger an endless argument for other platforms), I'm trying to compile a list of high profile websites that are implemented in ASP.NET. (No, they would have no idea what StackOverflow is).

Can you name a high-profile website implemented in ASP.NET?

EDIT:

Current list (thanks for all the responses):
(trying to avoid tech sites and prioritizing retail sites)

Costco - http://www.costco.com/
Crate & Barrel - http://www.crateandbarrel.com/
Home Shopping Network - http://www.hsn.com/
Buy.com - http://www.buy.com/
Dell - http://www.dell.com
Nasdaq - http://www.nasdaq.com/
Virgin - http://www.virgin.com/
7-Eleven - http://www.7-eleven.com/
Carnival Cruise Lines - http://www.carnival.com/
L'Oreal - http://www.loreal.com/
The White House - http://www.whitehouse.gov/
Remax - http://www.remax.com/
Monster Jobs - http://www.monster.com/
USA Today - http://www.usatoday.com/
ComputerJobs.com - http://computerjobs.com/
Match.com - http://www.match.com
National Health Services (UK) - http://www.nhs.uk/
CarrerBuilder.com - http://www.careerbuilder.com/

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19 Answers

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Here are some case studies from MS.

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I tend to turn the question...how hard is it to find developers for technology xyz?

This answer is also location specific. In my area it is much easier to find Asp.Net developers. Then PHP, then Java, then Ruby. If you want code that can be maintained over the long haul, you need developers. Asp.Net is where the developers are.

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Crateandbarrel.com

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These same discussions happen with every technology. Sometimes it's just a matter of people trying to feel like they are part of the process. A better response to requests that want you to justify your technology choices is to ask, "Why do you care?" You have to gauge whether or not your audience can handle this retort, but you're the expert. You have skills and experience that they don't necessarily have.

When they buy a car, do they ask where the cup holders were manufactured and what type of polymers were used to make the dash? Do they ask whether the catalytic converter contains platinum or palladium as the catalyst? Of course not. They just want a car that looks nice and takes them places.

Tell them that you're building something that works and meets the requirements. Tell them you'll be glad to help them improve the product or service, but when it comes to the implementation details, you've got it under control.

Disclaimer: I no longer work with .NET. The car analogy was stolen from a recent talk by Dave Thomas, though embellished by me.

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Chipotle's online ordering system. Yum.

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I do love me some fajita burritos. – Ryan McGeary Apr 21 at 17:55
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Careerbuilder.com

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Dell.com

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NHS National Health Service - Pretty big in the UK

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add uk's leading price comparision site Money Supermarket

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One of the most profitable online stores...

Costco

I don't know if you consider all of these to be high-profile sites but here are a few more.

Monster
ShareBuilder
BECU
John L Scott
REMAX
HTC
Zecco

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vote up 2 vote down

add google's orkut

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Do you know this for sure? I know there was speculation when it launched that it was Mono, but I thought it was never confirmed? – Portman Apr 15 at 3:25
I see .aspx extension all over the place, which indicates asp.net involvement in someway. – Mohamed Apr 15 at 5:17
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Plenty Of Fish

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Add Match.com. They were an early adopter of ASP.Net

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http://www.whitehouse.gov/

You can tell from the viewstate in the source.

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It's not high-profile in the way that MySpace or Stackoverflow might be, but we're using ASP.NET/IIS6 to serve ads for the SocialCash (http://socialcash.com) Headliners product, and we serve millions of impressions a day.

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You could try to build your own list -- start with a list of high-profile sites, like say this one: http://s3.amazonaws.com/alexa-static/top-1m.csv.zip, from Alexa (http://www.alexa.com/topsites) -- it's their top 1 million daily sites.

Grab a bunch off the top of that list, whip up some code to grab their home page and look for "X-Powered-By: ASP.NET' or 'X-AspNet-Version' headers and there you go.

However, I guess that list from MS will be more convincing.

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MySpace (at least, they're sending a Server: Microsoft-IIS/6.0 and X-AspNet-Version: 2.0.50727)

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MySpace

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Stackoverflow

If that isn't convincing enough I guess you could also throw around

  • MySpace
  • Dell
  • Wachovia
  • Microsoft
  • WhiteHouse.gov

To name a few

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Ugh, don't mention MySpace. It's a pile of crap and not entirely really written in ASP.NET. – senfo Apr 15 at 2:35
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MySpace was originally written in ColdFusion. It now runs partially in some kind of ColdFusion emulation layer on top of ASP.NET. So it is .NET but not garden variety. – Craig Apr 15 at 2:51
I worked @ Myspace and serfio & Craig are not correct. The coldfusion stuff is long gone .cfm's are mapped to .net – Chad Grant May 6 at 4:29
I worked for Intermix Media (which was at one time eUniverse - makers of MySpace) during the time that Fox was purchasing Intermix and MySpace. I watched as not just MySpace but all of the CF and PHP properties where converted to not just .NET but most of the Enterprise Application Blocks as well. It is a wonderful example of how .NET can be used and contorted to do just about anything! We actually had an ASP.NET MVC framework working at one time...long before this latest release of MVC. – Andrew Siemer Jun 23 at 1:40

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