That is a great advice. However if scalability must be introduced later on, it can be really hard as there are many features that have been added to the monolith, and refactoring it to become scalable can be a huge…
No, we are supposed to contribute meaningful comments so that ideas can be exchanged in a civilized manner.
General Relativity states that gravity and acceleration are equivalent, so yes, they cancel out. Unless you look outside you cannot tell whether you are in an elevator standing on ground on Earth (1g), or in space…
So you are going to try build the Autoverse in Permutation City? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permutation_City
Could asynchronous designs improve performance of future CPUs if and when Moore's Law hits physical limits?
That is a great advice. However if scalability must be introduced later on, it can be really hard as there are many features that have been added to the monolith, and refactoring it to become scalable can be a huge…
No, we are supposed to contribute meaningful comments so that ideas can be exchanged in a civilized manner.
General Relativity states that gravity and acceleration are equivalent, so yes, they cancel out. Unless you look outside you cannot tell whether you are in an elevator standing on ground on Earth (1g), or in space…
So you are going to try build the Autoverse in Permutation City? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permutation_City
Could asynchronous designs improve performance of future CPUs if and when Moore's Law hits physical limits?