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wvh
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  1. I'm still sad they shelved Mozilla Persona due to low adoption. There is a hole in the market around privacy and identity, and Mozilla would be a natural choice to fill it, but it's going to be an uphill battle to get major sites and end users on board. Not a job to be envious about indeed.
  2. It's becoming increasingly hard to distinguish an Onion article from actual media. Post-truth indeed.
  3. And I hope we can keep it that way, in spite of increasing polarisation everywhere. The world is not a good place if people can't see eye to eye and have some basic level of understanding.
  4. You're right, but between my carrier and Meta, I'd prefer to trust my carrier, even if it's just to know which window to throw a brick through. Maybe I'm being too European on this, but I'm not willing to hand over basic communications to private industry, especially companies whose entire business strategy is building profiles on people.

    I still hope for a protocol to win out that's not tied to one party.

  5. I feel the same, especially the feeling old and jaded part, but I disagree that things were easier. Systems such as Kubernetes are not worse than trying to administer a zillion servers and networks by hand in the late '90s (or with tools like Puppet and Ansible a bit later), let alone HA shenanigans; neither are they a magical solution, more of a side-step and necessary evolution of scale.

    There is a wild-grow of 80% solved problems in the Kubernetes space though, and especially the DevOps landscape seems to be plagued by half-solutions at the moment.

    I think part of the complexity arises from everything being interconnected services instead of simple stand-alone software binaries. Things talking with other things, not necessarily from the same maker or ecosystem.

    I don't understand decisions such as these though, retiring de facto standards such as Ingress NGINX. I can't name a single of our customers at $WORKPLACE that's running something else.

  6. I've seen that too, but it's still better than somebody yelling in your face about toilet paper.
  7. If you count 3 control plane nodes and at least one or two extra servers worth of space for pods to go when a node goes down, I'd say don't bother for anything less than 6-7 servers worth of infrastructure. Once you're over 10 servers, you can start using node affinity and labels to have some logical grouping based on hardware type and/or tenants. At that point it's just one big computer and the abstraction starts to really pay off compared to manually dealing with servers and installation scripts.

    I'd say the abstraction is not worth it when you have only a steady 2-3 servers worth of infrastructure. Don't do it at "Hello, world!" scale, you win nothing.

    (I work for a company that helps other companies set up and secure larger projects into environments like Kubernetes.)

  8. The US is a lot more down south than I thought. That somewhat explains you guys' love of air conditioning...

    I don't know how valid a climate comparison based purely on latitude is though... Surely Egypt is generally warmer than Florida?

  9. I think there is some value in being able to live in the moment, like say a cat: one moment you have a death scare, the next you're kind of hungry or sleepy. I feel that smart people see a lot more in the past, present and future, all the things themselves, and the things behind the things, and it's a whole lot harder to live in the moment and not ruminate and dwell on things.

    Alternatively, maybe it's just that overthinking that is driving some aspect of what we call intelligence; the ability to plan and see things in complex layers.

    Good amounts of happiness surely require some selective blindness.

  10. Lots of medical and governmental organisations are not allowed to run in public cloud environments. It's part of my job to help them get set up. However, in reality that often boils down to devs wining about adding a registry to Harbor to cache; nobody is going to recompile base images and read through millions of lines of third party code.

    A lot of security is posturing and posing to legally cover your ass by following an almost arbitrary set of regulations. In practice, most end up running the same code as the rest of us anyway. People need to get stuff done.

  11. Richard Stallman was onto something.
  12. My common model IKEA stove – rebranded Siemens or Electrolux – runs at ~400v (Northern Europe). I know because it broke and I almost poked at it, until I got spooked by the warning labels. It's on its own circuit. Not an expert but as far as I know, most houses in Western/Northern Europe have a three-prong stove/oven connection in the kitchen for a ~400v feed.
  13. A thousand badly written shell scripts might disagree.
  14. The whole concept of buying something because it is cheap is weird.

    I have a small list of items I think I will need in the near future; if it's not on that list, I'm not buying it, from anywhere, at any price. Maybe I'm a bit more ascetic than the average person, but I find it hard to imagine people just browsing lists of "cheap" stuff for hours to just buy stuff they don't need. And then being happy that they won because they paid less than some imaginary "full price".

  15. Rip Jane. We need more gentle souls like her, using soft power to get stuff done instead of bullying the world and everybody in it.
  16. I'm fully remote and finding places to get away resonates. I tried the library, but the artificial lighting, lack of infrastructure (especially large monitors) and maybe also the lack of a more social space where you are actually allowed to talk made it a less than ideal experience.

    But I concur that libraries as places for people to meet and do some sort of intellectual goal-oriented activity (as opposed to bars and other places of entertainment) are a great idea. I like what cities like Helsinki have done with Oodi, a library that also offers workspaces for people to do all sorts of things.

  17. I've done some benchmarks over the years and 6-7k/s for getting simple data out of a basic Postgres installation seems pretty spot on. The question is when using Postgres as a cache, are you taking away performance for actual, more complex business logic queries. That is going to depend on the level of overlap between endpoints that use caching and those that need more complex queries.

    What I'd be interested to see is a benchmark that mixes lots of dumb cache queries with typically more complex business logic queries to see how much Postgres performance tanks during highly concurrent load.

  18. Excellent point. As somebody with experience of major depression, even when you don't get taken up on your offer, always make sure people have an alternative to suicide. Put something in their calendar, even if you're sure they won't show up.

    This is one main reason loneliness is a silent killer: nothing gets put into the calendar.

  19. Never underestimate people's capacity for feeling left out, especially those that don't know how to show it. Loneliness and emotional disconnect are main drivers of depression and suicide. I agree with Alexei: always make an effort to invite everyone.
  20. I think their point is that you might not have much of a choice, taking laws and modern aesthetic and economic concerns into consideration.

    We "in the know" might agree, but we're not going to get it sold.

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