I was excited about this until I saw it's from jet.com. Heard too many things about bad dev practices there to believe a conference presentation about it.
It's unfortunate there aren't more F# jobs. I've always worked exclusively with Linux, but would switch to MS and all associated headaches in a second if I could write functional code with F#.
I've found that several C# shops are open to using F# where it makes sense. If you see an interesting job opening and they mention C# it's definitely worth asking about F#.
Sorry if I wasn't clear ... I do write Haskell on Linux.
I meant that F# would be enough to entice me away from Linux and overcome my activation barrier against using Windows. As long as it wasn't glorified C# with a thin functional wrapper, and it was a focus on real functional techniques, it would be highly interesting for me.
I do not have much of any F# experience but I write C# in my day job. I've heard nothing but good things about F#, including from people similar to you with a functional background incl. Haskell.
There are a lot of cool engineers with cool presentations. You can't watch them all, and filtering by properties of the company backing the work can sometimes be a useful way to find only the things more relevant for you.
> Also F# on Linux works like charm
Yes, my only current knowledge of F# comes from working through tutorials on my Ubuntu laptop.
My comment was meant to suggest that F# makes it worthwhile to endure the pains of working in a Windows environment. I love Python, for instance, but would not consider a job coding Python from Windows. For F#, I would consider it.
It's unfortunate there aren't more F# jobs. I've always worked exclusively with Linux, but would switch to MS and all associated headaches in a second if I could write functional code with F#.