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Really cool. I always wondered if something like this exists but could never find anything. Things like minio are quite different as they don't use the cloud native storage.

Amazing, one more step towards breaking vendor lock in!


Is recording yourself coding a worthy exercise?

Also, I am really curious about the overall breakdown of coding time in high-level categories. Do you mind sharing your average percentages?


- Have you proven the market? (how many people have you talked with? is the pain point big enough that they are willing to pay? how many in the waiting list?)

- Do you have a right to play? (do you have experience in the field that not many people do, etc)

- Are you passionate about the problem?

If you check all 3 then you're in a good position I would say.


If anyone else wants to see how property testing works in Go, this article has some nice examples: https://blog.gopheracademy.com/advent-2017/property-based-te...


This looks pretty cool!

I can't ever imagine using it tho :) If my bash scripts are so complex or critical that I feel the need to type check, I will probably use another scripting language where I can do that more easily while still having readable code.


If you ever check your arguments for any properties then this could still help, you'll have a systematic approach instead of an ad hoc one.


Kubernetes are amazing at what they do, but only relevant to ~0.1% of the companies in my opinion. It's way too complex and too much work for the rest of the world, and not worth the time invested.

A lot can be accomplished with simple virtual machines and some sort of auto scaling groups (depending on your cloud provider they have different names).

Kubernetes are amazing at unifying your workloads on any clouds though. If you care about portability, you should either consider using kubernetes for everything or using a tool that abstracts your configuration in a cloud-agnostic way. Although I'm a bit biased on this one.


Simple is subjective and dependent on where you're coming from. If you're used to Kubernetes then managing virtual machines seems needlessly time consuming and vice versa.


Looks cool - I will give it a try.


Of course he will say that now, Tesla has already profited from the insane stock rally in the last few years.


He's been saying that TSLA is overvalued for a long time now. Of course he took advantage of it...he would be dumb not to (everyone else is cashing in on the overvaluations of everything). He can still admit that it's stupid.


It's good for certain use cases that don't have too much data or don't care too much about performance when doing joins.


This is exactly what I do.

I'm looking for organic answers rather than the BS that the top websites google sends me to, and often I can find it on reddit.

I would say that 30% of my search queries end with site:reddit.com.


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