Master and Apprentice. At least as an american with family in "the trades", this is a much stronger connection for me over master and slave. But maybe this relation is not a strong anymore as trades-craft has fallen off in modern society as a popular career.
This is my experience as well just a bit north of you (Michigan). I always see Teslas in the middle lanes driving at more consistent speeds than others on the road. I figured it was because most of them are using autopilot.
Would this be any different from selling a car that used aftermarket repair parts such as a sensor, muffler, or electronic switch? This seems like the most equivalent situation to me. A Ford is still a Ford even if I went down to my local auto parts to purchase replacement parts for it.
I apologize for not really commenting on the content of the release, but I am shocked that it is on version 0.59.
I wonder why they even bother with supposedly following semver at this point. 0.59? This seems to mean they can break anything at any point and it's technically still "following semver". I guess I just don't understand it. This library is used by thousands and consumed by millions (billions?). Why not just use dates as versions?
They just announced that service a day or so ago, so it may be the only team that had a new product that could implement it this quickly.
It seems like AWS gets into a situation often where one team has a central service (such as Cloudformation, IAM, and now RAM) and users are often left waiting for all those individual teams of the other services (Beanstalk, ECS, Route53, etc) to implement their integration with those central services.
Probably a similar reason why we still can't tag every resource in AWS.
It is somewhat arbitrary though, isn't it? If AWS adds the ability to use security groups without a VPC, a lot of these issues go away wrt vpc or siloed infrastructure limits (cold starts).
There are still reasons to be in a private network - Being "one typo away" from exposing your services/db to the world is scary. But that seems like a solveable problem as well...
I have family in other industries (auto, financial) and they look at me like I'm crazy when I tell them about the restrictions on per-diems and expense reports in Tech (no alcohol, exact receipts).
For whatever reason, its very common in tech to not trust your employees to be responsible.
There is already a Steam app though (separate from the steam link app). If Apple had a problem with Steam itself on their store, why wouldn't they reject the standard app as well?
How long have you waited? For a while (After updating to their new IPs and enabling/disabling custom domain) it said it was unavailable, but then after 60-90 minutes both of my repos are now in "Not yet available for your site because the certificate has not finished being issued" state.
I guess I'll have a better idea tomorrow if it worked or not but for now I'm hoping this is just my repos working their way through github's cert queue.