@Aaronontheweb If you code something that pisses off a customer, but they keep coming back, it means you actually still add value in their live. If they don’t you should question the value proposition. Perfect solutions aren’t a good defence mechanism, unless for critical life and death stuff.
@Aaronontheweb Because programmers believe everything is in their control, and perfectionism culture has been rife for a while, or they don’t understand
Idempotency patterns.
Webhooks are essential for some services to work and provide value. However, so many people get them wrong. Missing one event can make them untrustworthy. I wrote a design consideration if you wanted to make your own:
https://t.co/NgjEgnxG95
@kellabyte You’ll find that there are different types of dotnet folk. We use it and it’s a great language. Dotnet 8 is great. Don’t blame a language or framework because of its users - that’s like saying all drivers of Volvo are old. Welcome to come see what we are up to!
@azuresupport#azhelp: All services from our AKS cluster has stopped connecting to Azure Service Bus. Submitted a critical ticket over an hour ago and still no contact coming back
I am thrilled to have been nominated for 40 Over Forty and would love your vote to help me make the official Top 40 list! You can vote for me at https://t.co/3ks4tPWNm9.
I am thrilled to have been nominated for 40 Over Forty and would love your vote to help me make the official Top 40 list! You can vote for me at https://t.co/3ks4tPWNm9.
IMO if you're committing a PR to an OSS project regarding functionality you're using in your job, you shouldn't even have to ask anyone for the permission. This code is running on your production, it's part of your responsibilities.