A thread on HN about bad code in legacy projects both makes me think how little we've learned as a discipline over the years and, honestly, how little credit we give ourselves for some pretty major innovations. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18442637 …
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It is highly likely that a service which is hard down learns of that fact faster than Twitter can apprise them of it, assuming that service is operated in a professional fashion. At risk of stating the obvious: this is a relatively novel development.
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The industry has decisively adopted: * a single, common encoding for almost all human languages * a single, parseable, human-readable data interchange format * a default protocol for information transport
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You can round to "Any new application talking to any application written by a competent team in last 10 years will be talking to it over an encrypted link which neither side had to think deeply about because the technology is reliable, ubiquitous, and uncontroversially legal."
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While it's not literally the case that you could replicate an entire modern software company's deployment for zero dollars in software licenses, that can almost round to true, due to the pervasive use of OSS. This is very good for learners.
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You can get a full development environment capable of doing Hello World spun up in your well-supported language of choice in, almost certainly, less than ten minutes of effort (contingent on you using a Mac, sadly).
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The majority case for libraries, APIs, and file formats of interest to you will overwhelmingly be "If you Google the thing you want you get exactly what you need very, very quickly."
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End of conversation
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K8s and snapshots change a lot - at my gig, a developer on their first day can do a *full* clone of the production environment (90 seconds) inc *the data*, modify, check in, deploy, add test cases to the CI/CD environment, create a PR, and see their changes in production. Day 1.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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