I'm wondering if I don't get your point because I'm too dumb or too smart. I may be too dumb[1] because I'm unable to infer for myself all the reasons Docker is bad that you haven't bothered to include in your article.…
Here's what I read: they had a solution written in Node.js; they rewrote the solution in .NET Core; it was 20x faster. It's anecdotal, sure, and Microsoft prompted them to write it, and YMMV, but they did a thing and it…
One obvious thing is that multiple processes means no sharing of any kind of state or in-memory cache, so you immediately have to go to an external cache like Redis or whatever, with the additional maintenance and minor…
You can have balance in your life and be a good coder. I think balance and passion are mutually exclusive, though,
Look, the people you are "pitying" are the people you depend on: we make your operating systems, your languages, your frameworks, your tools; we invent the things you use; we create your social networks; we abstract…
I'm wondering if I don't get your point because I'm too dumb or too smart. I may be too dumb[1] because I'm unable to infer for myself all the reasons Docker is bad that you haven't bothered to include in your article.…
Here's what I read: they had a solution written in Node.js; they rewrote the solution in .NET Core; it was 20x faster. It's anecdotal, sure, and Microsoft prompted them to write it, and YMMV, but they did a thing and it…
One obvious thing is that multiple processes means no sharing of any kind of state or in-memory cache, so you immediately have to go to an external cache like Redis or whatever, with the additional maintenance and minor…
You can have balance in your life and be a good coder. I think balance and passion are mutually exclusive, though,
Look, the people you are "pitying" are the people you depend on: we make your operating systems, your languages, your frameworks, your tools; we invent the things you use; we create your social networks; we abstract…