
It’s really just an amortization, or perhaps, an atomization of effort; sadly many don’t really value the benefits of that behavior.

It’s really just an amortization, or perhaps, an atomization of effort; sadly many don’t really value the benefits of that behavior.

Lukewarm take: if you don’t make some effort to clean up to have less of a mess while you cook, you’re not competent enough to be in the kitchen.
~Just my opinion; don’t burn me at the stake.~
Like a frightened turtle…


Let’s just go full
boarbore hypothetical:


Disclaimer: the following is just my opinion and not to be taken as gospel. This is not financial advice.
The hope for them is that one day, after proving their ability to suffer a boot upon their neck, they will have proved themselves worthy to put their boot on someone’s neck.
How does one perpetuate slavery?
Turn some of the slaves into masters.


U.S. Oil Industry is largely reluctant to re-invest in Venezuela.
Lots of companies are eager to spend in Venezuela — except the ones Trump most needs
“The most enthusiastic are among the least prepared and least sophisticated,” said one industry official familiar with the responses the White House is receiving.


The next paragraph says:
The institute said those figures support the possibility that CBA3656 reacted with nanoplastics in the intestine and promoted their excretion from the body, thus exhibiting high nanoplastic biosorption efficiency.


Is everyone in commercial software development finally saying, “Fuck it, we’ll run the shit ourselves”?
I’m an infrastructure and devops noob here; take my words with a grain of salt.
I need GPU clusters with ECC VRAM for research and found it’s cheaper to just have my own high-ish performance compute in my own office I paid for once than pay AWS/Azure/GCS/etc forever or at least everytime I want to train a custom DNN model. Sometimes I use Linode but it’s for monitoring. But I can run shit at will and I have data sovereignty.
Has the paradigm shifted back to developing and serving things in-house now that big tech vendor-lock/tie-ins have so many dark patterns that scalability isn’t cost-effective with them? Or is it just my own pipe dream?
Very true, but I submit that the wisdom of “clean as you cook” is obvious on day 2.