The good news if you take 2 years to ship the system "properly" then you won't have to re-factor it because the company went out of business or that product was too late to market.
There is a phrase "million dollar problems". You do stuff at your startup that will take a million dollars to fix because it doesn't scale.
The point is that if your startup doesn't get to that scale then it doesn't matter. If you startup does reach that scale then you have plenty of money/people to spend a million dollars fixing it.
Replies like yours gloss over nuance. I don't mind prioritizing time to market as a programmer; I am not clueless, I understand that imperfect product that pours money into my employer's coffers is infinitely better than it sinking and we all get fired out of necessity.
My problem comes from the fact that the leadership _never_ compromises and never allows us to avoid at least some crises that are extremely easy to foresee (and have happened like clockwork in 95% of the cases where I or other colleagues have predicted them).
Again, sure, let's go to market and start making sales. I completely agree. But scolding a dev for fixing a DB schema anomaly that slows down ~40% of _all_ feature requests and that it took him the grand day or two to do so, is not just myopic. It's moronic.
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Even shorter / TL;DR version: If the balance of power was 80% leadership and 20% engineers, I'd still be completely OK with that. But wherever I go the "balance" of power is more like 99% leadership and 1% engineers (and that's only when stuff really has hit the fan; they'd take away that last one percent as well if they could).
That is the problem. There's no balance. No compromise. Just people barking orders.
I saw an interview with this person. Often the photos of rooms will be taken from the door-frame of the bathroom looking in or out. So not obvious if there is an actual door.
I just feel like this becomes time consuming after a while. Will there be soap? Toilet paper? A bed? You don't know unless you ask! But ... c'mon ... they can just tell you on the website.
Or just don't travel if every detail becomes an issue. I make certain basic assumptions--yes I assume there will be a bed and toilet paper--but, in general, I adapt as necessary.
That is fair. I have noticed doors going missing in hotels but typically travel alone so it didn't really register as an issue. I would not want to share a room with a coworker ever, bathroom door or not.
If you’re going on so much travel that this is a burden then you’re truly privileged. Maybe your assistant or travel agent can handle this issue for you.
Jabs aside, you don’t need to be rich to use a travel agent or Rick Steves guidebook instead of blindly booking hotels on Internet sites. If there’s an issue like this you’ll easily find it on review sites and most of those are searchable.
The same thing applies to other experiences like restaurants and museums. For example, it’s always smart to jump on Google/Trip Advisor reviews and type in “kids” or “stroller” into various attractions to make sure you are prepared if you’re bringing kids along.
Travel is never perfect. I’ve been in weird rooms with actual glass walls with a perfect framed view of the shitter facing the bed. I have no idea why they did this, maybe this culture values natural light in bathrooms? I witnessed it more than once so it wasn’t just one creepy place. Individual privacy especially within the same family is something of a recent and western concept from my understanding.
Either way it was hilarious and a minor inconvenience considering it was a lot minute hotel. It’s just peeing and pooping, we all do it. My traveling friend and I took turns averting our eyes. We had warm clean beds and a story to tell.
A few people started using Ruby for command line tools[1] but the community was very focuses around rails. Also Ruby isn't usually part of the standard OS install. So Ruby stayed stuck in it's Rails niche.
Sure but OP said that it doesn't even work in trivial cases.
Most of the anti-AI people have conceded it sometimes works but they still say it is unreliable or has other problems (copyright etc). However there are still a few that say it doesn't work at all.
I’m not really sure how you envision AI use at your job but AI can be the extremely imperfect tool it is now and also be extremely useful. What part of AI use to you feels like a slot machine?
Never used it since it was only available in the US. Looks like additional countries were not added till Oct 2016, 11 years after it was first launched[0]
None of the companies I've worked for have used it AFAIK, despite them all using AWS. I think I've mostly ignored it as one of the niche AWS products that isn't relevant.
My 2cents is that in a lot of cases swap is being used for unimportant stuff leave more RAM for your app. Do a "ps aux" and look at all the RAM used by weird stuff. Good news is those things will be swapped out.
Example on my personal VPS
$ free -m
total used free shared buff/cache available
Mem: 3923 1225 328 217 2369 2185
Swap: 1535 1335 200
There is a phrase "million dollar problems". You do stuff at your startup that will take a million dollars to fix because it doesn't scale.
The point is that if your startup doesn't get to that scale then it doesn't matter. If you startup does reach that scale then you have plenty of money/people to spend a million dollars fixing it.
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