So like in say 1000 years the world will still be the same? It'll crash one day. The world will change. Statistically speaking when it does it will likely be for the worse too.
Yeah there should be debugging classes, googling classes, and how to orient yourself in a massive, existing codebase classes.
>Literally spending hours trying to figure out how to set things up through hours of Googling doesn't really help that, nor does it promote the "figuring it out" people think it does - its just stumbling upon the right…
I know a guy who owns a domain in my country equivalent to user.com or test.com or something like that. He frequently knows what new tech companies are about to launch because devs doing local testing sometimes put the…
They're winning on both sides now no matter which option you go for.
And cars.
>Probably in the form of some Romaji-like equivalent (ideograms are too high a bar) but we will start to adopt it. CCP will make you adopt it as-is, or GTFO. I find it interesting their approach to language compared to…
We have about 6 physical DB servers, each client has their own db/schema on one of those boxes. Several thousand clients each with 10s of users per client. It brings in $15m ARR. So, it works. We're wanting to move off…
Depends on the industry / clients. It's significantly better for us as a team to be able to focus on projects and improvements that benefit everyone. I've noticed the business starts to suffer when we focus on…
I had fun adding https support to a decade old PHP app for managing a domain registry where the entire thing was in German :) I spoke neither German nor PHP.
note to self: stay the fuck away from the Polish social insurance administration domain.
What's a submarine ad?
Traditional enterprise software suffers from this problem. SaaS doesn't really. Having to deal with different versions of a codebase for different customers was hellish and I don't want to do it again.
Not really. Your queries don't have to contain tenant Id if as part of your tenant context they have a connection string to their tenant DB.
Good point. That initial period is hellish (and amazing) and it does taper off somewhat but settles on a new baseline of permanently elevated difficulty.
It doesn't get easier, it just gets a different kind of difficult.
So like in say 1000 years the world will still be the same? It'll crash one day. The world will change. Statistically speaking when it does it will likely be for the worse too.
Yeah there should be debugging classes, googling classes, and how to orient yourself in a massive, existing codebase classes.
>Literally spending hours trying to figure out how to set things up through hours of Googling doesn't really help that, nor does it promote the "figuring it out" people think it does - its just stumbling upon the right…
I know a guy who owns a domain in my country equivalent to user.com or test.com or something like that. He frequently knows what new tech companies are about to launch because devs doing local testing sometimes put the…
They're winning on both sides now no matter which option you go for.
And cars.
>Probably in the form of some Romaji-like equivalent (ideograms are too high a bar) but we will start to adopt it. CCP will make you adopt it as-is, or GTFO. I find it interesting their approach to language compared to…
We have about 6 physical DB servers, each client has their own db/schema on one of those boxes. Several thousand clients each with 10s of users per client. It brings in $15m ARR. So, it works. We're wanting to move off…
Depends on the industry / clients. It's significantly better for us as a team to be able to focus on projects and improvements that benefit everyone. I've noticed the business starts to suffer when we focus on…
I had fun adding https support to a decade old PHP app for managing a domain registry where the entire thing was in German :) I spoke neither German nor PHP.
note to self: stay the fuck away from the Polish social insurance administration domain.
What's a submarine ad?
Traditional enterprise software suffers from this problem. SaaS doesn't really. Having to deal with different versions of a codebase for different customers was hellish and I don't want to do it again.
Not really. Your queries don't have to contain tenant Id if as part of your tenant context they have a connection string to their tenant DB.
Good point. That initial period is hellish (and amazing) and it does taper off somewhat but settles on a new baseline of permanently elevated difficulty.
It doesn't get easier, it just gets a different kind of difficult.