Just my two cents: I have coworkers who use AI to drive basically all their communication in Slack and I absolutely hate them with a deep passion. I actively avoid meetings, conversations, and exclude them from everything possible.
If you use AI to drive your communication with other humans, you suck.
the world today is banning kids from the internet largely to prevent them from talking to strangers online. i think a scenario where the pedophiles can use waymo to snatch up kids from summer camps might encounter some resistance.
> It's really hard to justify $1000 for it when the Switch 2 is $450
For someone without an existing library, sure, but if you have a massive existing Nintendo/Switch1 or Steam library, that's going to drive your decision making far more than the price tag.
I think feature flags, remote configs, and experiments are all the same thing. Semantically they differ in how you're applying the config and interpreting the outcomes.
Anyone considering leaving AWS and thinking they'll transfer all their data for free [1], I've got news for you: It's a lie.
AWS takes as long as possible (for me it was a month) to respond to the initial DTO request,
then require you to submit a multi-page form answering a barrage of questions about why you're leaving, where you're going to, what services you used, and estimated data egress. A week or so later, if they approve the request, you're not allowed to begin DTO until 60 days after the approval.
By the time you can egress your data for "free", you've been stuck on AWS for 3-4 months since you first made the decision to leave.
[1] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-44803163