I mean, if anything, I would say microservices are the present.
As assaultpotato said, horses for courses, but I mean, microservices aren’t really a new concept at this point.
I mean, if anything, I would say microservices are the present.
As assaultpotato said, horses for courses, but I mean, microservices aren’t really a new concept at this point.
Speaking of analog: Light Guns don’t work on modern televisions due to the high latency relative to CRT screens (which had essentially zero latency).
It baffles me that they sell Chrome as private and/or secure, and baffles me even more that people believe them.
take up subsistence farming
Where?
Tbf people say this about a lot of things the Republicans do.
Can’t say we as a species have a great history of granting rights to others.
You’re in luck! The book I’ve generally heard recommended to beginners for Python is available for free online!
(I’m glad you did, because I hated it, haha.)
They were definitely on grass.
In case anyone is curious - as I was - here’s the commercial: https://youtu.be/uTVlnehpRHQ
(Not the Toys R Us channel, in case you don’t want to give them direct views.)
I feel like everyone has their preferred builds they kind of gravitate to and feel comfortable with. That, and for me, a lot of luck to make up for my lack of skill lol.
Noita.
I’ve gotten the Greed ending once (defeating Kolmisilmä and “completing” The Work), but I’ve never even considered attempting the true ending.
Love how they make this sound like some incredible feat. When you aren’t bound to license agreements, turns out it’s actually very easy to have a “massive” content library. Literally the only hurdle is storage space.
Because all the legal services are incredibly anti-consumer and are offering less services, with (more) ads, for more money every year.
It’s like they took an ergonomics textbook and read it upside-down.
Haha literally what planet do they live on?
That was quite a segue into complaining about inflation.
Honestly I wish there were less communities. I’ve said this before, but people treat Lemmy like late-stage Reddit, expecting niche communities for everything, and we end up with hundreds of communities with no (or one, if we’re lucky) active members.
This problem is then amplified by the fact that these niche communities are split even further across several instances, so our userbase ends up completely dissipated.
I would love to see users focus on a smaller number of more general-purpose communities. Of course, these should still be shared across instances, but I think we would benefit a lot from having, say, a “video games” community instead of 500 specific game communities.
As a side note as well, I don’t think we shouldn’t be “allowed” to create more niche communities (though if an instance admin wanted to regulate, that’s their call). I think this should be more of a user culture shift, if anything.
The only way to play, imo.
I guess what I’m saying is that I think things will generally stay balanced the way they are. Monoliths are never going to completely die out, and neither are microservices.
They both serve different functions, so there’s no reason to think one will “win” over the other.