Yeah, if I take a dense grid of photos near my house, it would reveal a 500 m circle. But in practice I don't take _that_ many photos in the neighborhood. Also, the circle isn't perfectly centered on my home.
I think there's a pretty big difference here. It's not like Github prevents you from building a Github competitor. Or Linear is preventing you from using it to build a Linear competitor.
This is more akin to Windows somehow preventing you from building a new OS.
I remember working for a company that did a lot of business in logistics. We were strictly prohibited from using any Amazon Web Services because several of our very high profile customers didn’t want anything on AWS. The higher ups were thoroughly convinced Amazon would copy it (and I mean, they came out with a product that competed with us, so they weren’t wrong!)
This kind of stuff “but they’ll copy us” is always weird (and wrong). Logistics isn’t some secret sauce. It’s taught in operations degrees across colleges. If a company is worried that all it takes is another company “copying” their IP to supersede them, then you don’t have a company, you have a simple app.
Amazon didn’t “copy” logistics from Apple. But both of them use similar underlying processes and optimizations. They both excel at it, and neither is eating the other’s profits. The same goes for smaller companies. Or the logistics providers like UPS.
> This is more akin to Windows somehow preventing you from building a new OS.
Tangent, but have you tried repartitioning your Windows disk to make room for a new OS? Or tried to configure Windows to let you dualboot? Or get the clock time right if you dualboot? Or let you debug "Secure Boot"?
Windows is outright hostile when it comes to (sharing with) a new OS
it also feels strange to query for DB load before starting a job.. i'm not even sure how you would do it, how you would adjust a job given a load value, and what would you do if there's too much load.
I refused to connect my TV to the internet and use a Vero V for all of my watching needs. The Vero V is absolutely worse than most other experiences, but I'm happy.
Yes all the time actually, especially when making system migrations. Uncle Bob writes about this in Clean Code. It is actually extremely common since it's the most apparent course of action to look at hard-coded values in maintenance and backport it as specs to new system.
They can typically operate indefinitely on diesel generators and have hot supply contracts with multiple suppliers. Even our small rinky dink datacenter had that.
So, it would generally be more effective to hit the actual datacenter than try to cut the power.
Several gulf state oil companies have declared force majeure on contracts they have to supply various customers due to the war. Good luck on getting diesel deliveries when things really hit the fan.
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