I'm interested less in getting to Elm 1.0 than getting past Elm 0.19, which is the version that locked out all native modules that weren't officially blessed by Elm's author. Far as I can tell, that pretty well marked the end of Elm.
You don't have to learn much resource jargon for a quadlet, just the Pod type, and a relatively small subset of it at that (you're not going to be using things like selectors or priority classes). And there's a script that can convert a compose file to a quadlet, so you don't have to do it from scratch.
> Personally I wish docker had not rejected composition/integration around systemd. Would have made everyone’s job a lot easier in the long term.
It also would have only run on Linux hosts (and not all of those at that), so something else would have been adopted instead. Docker didn't win by being superior to every alternative, it won by being good enough and being everywhere. For portable orchestration, Desktop does ship with kubernetes that's literally one click to enable.
> I wonder if podman would be a speed downgrade here?
Doubtful. But for sure it would be a compatibility downgrade. When I tried podman-compose a couple years ago, I found it nowhere near usable, though I'm told it's improved since. If you want a better Docker for mac, you're looking for OrbStack.
On macOS, there's Orbstack, which is ridiculously compatible (I believe it's based on the same moby engine underneath). On Linux there's oodles of options for working with OCI containers, but nothing else I know of that's compatible with the docker API or CLI.
> What exactly is dangerous about this climb? What kills people specifically?
Lack of oxygen, mostly. Bad in itself, but if the temperatures drop to dangerous lows, you're less likely to notice because you're out also of your head due to hypoxia/hypercapnia.
Perhaps, but I don't see the costs getting anywhere near being worth it. You'd need a space elevator or to manufacture the sinks IN SPAA— er, in space. The latter is theoretically possible but still extremely remote, the former still requires unobtanium.
Train-in-a-vacuum-tube isn't even restricted by the laws of physics, and it doesn't have to be a perfect vacuum anyway, just low pressure. Data Centers IN SPAAAAAACE have the teensy little problem of cooling that you can't just brute-force a solution to. Those giant things dangling off the ISS that make up most of its footprint aren't solar panels, they're heatsinks, and they still have issues managing heat.
The "bully pulpit" of an advice columnist whose main distribution platform was The Onion is somewhat less prominent than that of a sitting United States Senator. I'll just leave it there.