Angular is actually way more widespread than React but nice snarky comment regardless
That's partially true, but it does seem to find it's way in production on lots of low traffic sites.
The only reason I brought it up is that there is a myth that many developers believe SQLlite is only useful as a dev enviroment database
The use case for SQLite isn't high traffic public facing webpages. Here is their own list of 'famous' users: https://www.sqlite.org/famous.html Every iPhone, and Android phone have SQLite running on them, which easily…
It's actually commonly used in production for certain types of databases. SQLite is not a replacement for something such as postgresql but it certainly has it's use cases.
Case sensitivity i'm assuming you mean the automatic semi-colon insertion due to a line break after a return statement? I have a hard time seeing this as being a reason to dislike an entire language. Most languages have…
I'm not talking about what the author wrote, I'm talking about the 500 posts which entire take away was 'mongo is retarded'. Reread what I wrote.
Unfortunately that's not how your article has been interpreted, especially not in the reddit thread which has (predictably) divulged into an incoherent MongoDB hate-fest.
Hastily designed for version 0.0.1, this is simply not the case if you are using modern EMCAScript
You criticize people for _premature optimization_ while in the same breath advocating rolling your own, shitting implementation for page views? Right...
Clearly this is a long game play.
This is typical programmer attitude. Standard estimates go like this: When trying to make themselves look good on online developer forums: 1/100th real development time When estimating time involved for co-worker:…
Even more so, an the relative difference of |70% - 50%| / |%50| = 40% is gigantic. A very misleading statement.
Very true. The fact is, even very intelligent people tend to stick with ideas that were popular as they 'grew' into their position. Programming is young, but if you look at the history of more developed fields such as…
It was a great talk and his high-energy delivery I think is a well welcomed change of pace compared to many tech conference speakers
This thread has been stormed by people who work in the sys admin space and either don't care to learn the technology, have used it unsuccessfully while it was young, or see it as harmful to their career.
Here you go: `docker run ubuntu:14.04 /bin/echo 'Hello world'`
Care to explain what issues you have ran into and how recent it was?
His incoherent rant is only motivated by a threat to his career
Where are these magically difficult to maintain containers? I regularly deploy stuff via containers and moving my github repo to a container to being deployed is very simple.
> well, each and every single one of them has to be maintained, updated for security fixes... Then you patch it by redeploying it. > Not to mention the likely possibility of breaking API changes in the container…
These are pretty high standards for the coveted position of tree ownership.
Destabilizing countries with mass murder turns citizens into terrorist sympathizers.
I haven't died yet, hoping to disprove that hypothesis (I avoid all trees)
Agreed. This is what is called an 'act of god' in the insurance world. OSHA reports that over 100 people a year are killed by trees each year. Should we regulate trees with overhanging branches in all areas zoned as…
Angular is actually way more widespread than React but nice snarky comment regardless
That's partially true, but it does seem to find it's way in production on lots of low traffic sites.
The only reason I brought it up is that there is a myth that many developers believe SQLlite is only useful as a dev enviroment database
The use case for SQLite isn't high traffic public facing webpages. Here is their own list of 'famous' users: https://www.sqlite.org/famous.html Every iPhone, and Android phone have SQLite running on them, which easily…
It's actually commonly used in production for certain types of databases. SQLite is not a replacement for something such as postgresql but it certainly has it's use cases.
Case sensitivity i'm assuming you mean the automatic semi-colon insertion due to a line break after a return statement? I have a hard time seeing this as being a reason to dislike an entire language. Most languages have…
I'm not talking about what the author wrote, I'm talking about the 500 posts which entire take away was 'mongo is retarded'. Reread what I wrote.
Unfortunately that's not how your article has been interpreted, especially not in the reddit thread which has (predictably) divulged into an incoherent MongoDB hate-fest.
Hastily designed for version 0.0.1, this is simply not the case if you are using modern EMCAScript
You criticize people for _premature optimization_ while in the same breath advocating rolling your own, shitting implementation for page views? Right...
Clearly this is a long game play.
This is typical programmer attitude. Standard estimates go like this: When trying to make themselves look good on online developer forums: 1/100th real development time When estimating time involved for co-worker:…
Even more so, an the relative difference of |70% - 50%| / |%50| = 40% is gigantic. A very misleading statement.
Very true. The fact is, even very intelligent people tend to stick with ideas that were popular as they 'grew' into their position. Programming is young, but if you look at the history of more developed fields such as…
It was a great talk and his high-energy delivery I think is a well welcomed change of pace compared to many tech conference speakers
This thread has been stormed by people who work in the sys admin space and either don't care to learn the technology, have used it unsuccessfully while it was young, or see it as harmful to their career.
Here you go: `docker run ubuntu:14.04 /bin/echo 'Hello world'`
Care to explain what issues you have ran into and how recent it was?
His incoherent rant is only motivated by a threat to his career
Where are these magically difficult to maintain containers? I regularly deploy stuff via containers and moving my github repo to a container to being deployed is very simple.
> well, each and every single one of them has to be maintained, updated for security fixes... Then you patch it by redeploying it. > Not to mention the likely possibility of breaking API changes in the container…
These are pretty high standards for the coveted position of tree ownership.
Destabilizing countries with mass murder turns citizens into terrorist sympathizers.
I haven't died yet, hoping to disprove that hypothesis (I avoid all trees)
Agreed. This is what is called an 'act of god' in the insurance world. OSHA reports that over 100 people a year are killed by trees each year. Should we regulate trees with overhanging branches in all areas zoned as…