there have been a lot more issues than just that incident
they apparently like driving into floodwaters [1]
one vehicle got confused by construction barriers, entered opposing traffic, and halted [2]
in Dallas, a gas leak caused an explosion that leveled an apartment building, a Waymo unit blocked the scene, and first responders had to first reach into the car and try grasping the wheel, before the remote support agent agreed to kill the car and put it in neutral so they could push it out of their way [3]
I have a moderate fear for the safety of my children with these things on the road
well, any accounts running outdated workloads (could be anything LAMP-flavored) could be attack vectors, with the entire shared machine possibly compromised by any weak account due to these latest LPEs
these cPanel machines frequently run 4- or low-5-figure quantities of customer accounts, each with potentially multiple domains or CMS deployments, and not always the most technically-engaged customer base, so that's a lot of surface area to account for: how diligent can hosts realistically be about every WordPress plugin, every Drupal or Magento module, and so on?
(nb I don't like shared hosting and am not defending it, just addressing the reality of the long tail)
FFXIV's level/stat sync system is also pretty cool for keeping the older stuff playable long past its original release, players get levels and stats and skills scaled down to the max level appropriate for the content
4-player dungeons still end up being a bit of a faceroll, but it's definitely possible to wipe on the 8-player bosses if mechanics are not observed
there used to be a lot more shared hosting in the world when Slashdot ruled the geek news roost
it'd be fine if it's one site on a dedicated machine, but these shared webhosts would routinely cram 500-1000 hosting accounts onto something like a single-core, HT-less 2.4GHz Pentium 4 with two gigs of RAM, running mpm_prefork on Apache 2.0, with single-node MySQL 5.x (maybe even 4.x!) on the same box... which was not terribly efficient as others observed
you carry about 20x the compute power of that machine in your pocket, even a Raspberry Pi 4 could triple the workload
in the case of Azure, the users are the engineers tasked with implementing the infra
I'm not sure I've ever heard of a shop adopting Azure on pure engineering merit but my anecdata are hardly exhaustive. it tends to be forced for weird business reasons (retailers mistrusting Amazon, data residency requirements, sweetheart credit deal, CIO convinced by Azure rep over golf)
I always liked going to well-stocked stores and browsing for stuff. That was Fry's until they shot themselves in the foot.
Micro Center might not be optimal on price, but sometimes you just want to wander a store full of cool stuff and maybe walk out with something you didn't expect, instead of another anonymous box of schmutz from Amazon or wherever
A few years ago I received a VM from a spam caller, the content of which was a Twilio tutorial, verbatim ("You did not reveal yourself to be human. Goodbye!")
they apparently like driving into floodwaters [1]
one vehicle got confused by construction barriers, entered opposing traffic, and halted [2]
in Dallas, a gas leak caused an explosion that leveled an apartment building, a Waymo unit blocked the scene, and first responders had to first reach into the car and try grasping the wheel, before the remote support agent agreed to kill the car and put it in neutral so they could push it out of their way [3]
I have a moderate fear for the safety of my children with these things on the road
[1] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgplyxxl75o
[2] https://www.reddit.com/r/Austin/comments/1tzszpx/waymo_stuck...
[3] https://www.keranews.org/news/2026-06-04/oak-cliff-apartment...