Having a billing limit is important to me as I don't want to risk unbounded costs for personal projects.
> we'll just suspend your apps when the credit runs out.
This sounds great! I've looked at Fly.io before but didn't realise this was a thing so didn't go past looking. I'll definitely give Fly.io a test run now. :)
Thank you for your work on adding user registration and authorization to Phoenix!
I'm setting up a new Phoenix app for a side project this weekend and have just run Arron Renner's auth generator[1]. Having user registration out of the box will save a big chunk of time and energy!
The Great Barrier Reef will continue to deteriorate until the problems of global warming and ocean acidification are resolved.
But these aren't the only problems the ocean is facing. Resolving other issues will help maintain the health of ocean ecosystems.
It's likely wishful thinking but possibly it will be harder to justify new coal mines etc if enough of these individual agreements are accepted. :shrug:
> The Great Barrier Reef will continue to deteriorate until the problems of global warming and ocean acidification are resolved.
Yes and Australia has been actively working against that while laughing about the plight of the islanders who're most affected by climate change "time doesn't mean anything when you're about to have water lapping at your door" - Home Affairs Min. Dutton https://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-09-11/dutton-overheard-joki...
At COP25, it was Australia (along with Saudi Arabia and Brazil) who were blocking progress.
It's possible to actively support positive change at the same time as having little hope our collective actions will avert catastrophic climate change.
Yep. I'm beginning to feel this is true. 2020 has been a crap year in many ways. But I expect 2020 will be one of the better years compared to what is coming.
I find it's actually the opposite. Writing things down means I can forget about whatever it is and focus on the task at hand.
> it's not as important as it seemed yesterday
This is a good thing in some situations. I generally write down ideas whenever they appear. Coming back to the ideas in days/weeks/months helps to provide some perspective. If it still looks like a good idea, it can be acted on.
Bad ideas can be discard or ignored.
It's a better outcome than spending a day getting side tracked only to wake up the next day to realise the idea was rubbish.
It doesn't hurt to have a backlog of things for those slow, inspiration free days either.
I feel like there are a bunch of coding habits that work well for solo developers but not devs on a team.