As someone growing up with shared hosting, VPS and eventually K8s, I never really got Cloudflare's offering (apart from CDN/DDOS/DNS). I'm not sure if it's their positioning or if I never had the problems they're trying to solve, but it just doesn't click for me. Durable objects, Wrangler, D1, some custom Node.js API... it's all kind of opaque to me how it really solves any problem better than just using Postgres, Redis, etc on top of K8S or something like that.
> GIDs are not checked for authorization when doing the lookup - they are meant to be generated above the authorization layer, and to be consumed above the authorization layer
Then the problem with this post boils down to applying the authorization layer in any tool call, just like you do in controllers. Seems obvious?
I‘ve had no success using Antigravity, which is a shame because the ideas are promising, but the execution so far is underwhelming. Haven‘t gotten past an initial plannin doc which is usually aborted due to model provider overload or rate limiting.
I have rarely seen this work in practice in 20 years of CSS, but maybe in CSS Zen Garden. Yes, you can freely change the CSS. But usually changes are triggered by the HTML, like some information is added. This then requires you to change the CSS and likely break all sorts of other uses, which is not a problem with Tailwind.
Funny enough I was looking into mbtiles serverless solutions before I went to bed, now I start my day browsing HN and I find this clever solution. Love HN for this type of stuff :)
No need to be sorry, I'm still bought into GitLab. I use it extensively at work and it's fantastic. But with my private projects, I don't have the capacity to deal with Kubernetes' complexity (even when it's well integrated), I really just want my stuff to be fully managed and GitLab isn't there, yet. I'll keep an eye out.
I actually switched back to GitHub yesterday, because it‘s still better integrated in the overal tool landscape (eg Heroku). So I just pulled the trigger on a $7 subscription for private repos. And today the good news of free private repos arrived :)
https://www.anthropic.com/engineering/a-postmortem-of-three-...