Why so mean? You can look at all of the commits and see that the same dev who has been writing these drivers and apps pretty much single handedly has been making commits on the site for the past few years. https://github.com/microsoft/MIDI/commits/main/docs
You can even PR fixes if you want to show off your web dev skills.
I've been doing this lately, building a Godot game with Copilot CLI. I'm using Godot MCP Pro which can automate interactions and screenshots, and have the whole game script in a markdown doc. I was happily surprised when I asked for a walkthrough and it all just worked, found and fixed some regressions while I was sleeping.
What's with the "just copy it" thing? Nobody does that, we use NuGet packages, GitHub Actions, SDK supported containers, reproducible cross-platform builds from command line, etc.
edit: I'm sure some people use file/copy, but you sure don't have to. That stopped being a common thing 10+ years ago with cross-platform .NET.
There are several ways to manage migrations depending on the team structure and dev practices: SQL scripts, command line, bundles (single-file executables), and in-app. The team recommends SQL scripts since they can be reviewed, tuned, and managed by a DBA but take your pick. https://learn.microsoft.com/ef/core/managing-schemas/migrati...