I'm noticing a rapid growth in "weird" PRs. PRs that fix a problem in the most non-obvious way (when there ARE obvious ways to do it). I suspect it's LLM written but non-disclosed. I'm a big fan of code assistance but without an experienced driver the result is some real slop.
@RealDemoSmash I loved your Iron Sheik story on the recent pod 😂
I just have two quick questions for you:
1. When and why did you decide to retire your bicep pad for covering your tattoo?
2. When you moved from NWA to WWF you looked much bigger. Did you train for a bulk up?
When you put a webserver up on the internet. anywhere, hosting anything, you will see "the background radiation of the internet", and it looks like this:
GitHub recently shipped a new Actions UI and it is a huge improvement. It's visually more pleasing but it's also way less laggy when viewing jobs with large amounts of output. Whoever did this, please do large PRs next, you're amazing.
I'm an equal opportunity critic. I talk a lot of shit about GitHub (and continue to have a LOT of criticisms about the product), but I'll absolutely call out good work when I see it!
Example: https://t.co/8O6ncb4XRT
It felt like:
Amazon - Shipping, quantity over quality. PMs wanted to just ship the new announcement at Reinvent.
Microsoft - Revenue. They wanted to make money. Everyone does but Microsoft really highlighted it.
Google - Technology. We wasted so much time circling about architectural stuff in partnership meetings. So confusing.
This is all very reductive and my own opinion, but it's how I'd characterize it.
lol. Azure was actually the worst API to deal with. But Microsoft committed full time engineers to do it so... awesome! Google was the easiest, generally, once you defeated the auth boss. Amazon was wild because their APIs would vary so wildly across products.
This is fascinating: https://t.co/D1ZxMUXvXx
> Internet Infrastructure Map: This visualization shows the growth of the undersea cable network and global internet peering capacity over time.
#network#internet