I’ve seen so many deals get hung up on the smallest legal issues. One time a company spent 6 months just negotiating the NDA before could even get to a POC that the champion kept pushing and wanting to do!
I think what’s cool about CommonPaper is not just having the negotiations scoped to smaller areas but also the affect on the sales cycle. If can trim months off a deal process, that can help save a startup in terms of resources spent and dollars coming in earlier.
I think what’s interesting is while UDF has existed for some time. It anecdotally has seemed to be increasing in pace in announcements recently driven by wasm. For all the benefits explained in the post leading to a great end user experience, I would expect it’s something all the database providers to roll out as tablestakes in the future.
There's a company that does this already! The visualization of code and diagrams helps different times of learners I think. Which also is beneficial for knowledge transfer since everyone learns different, some better from pictures vs some better from drilling down deeper. I also think you systems thinkers having a good architecture diagrams that can be visualized in different ways can lead to insights that otherwise are hidden. https://www.codesee.io/
Very cool use case for CRDTs! I've seen a bunch of different use cases from other products like https://liveblocks.io/ and https://electric-sql.com/. It's interesting how CRDTs are now taking hold so much for all these collaborative syncing scenarios. Wonder what's driving the proliferation now given they've been around for awhile?
They gave no information on what was hacked. Although they're saying no passwords were compromised because of their encryption and architecture.
For a layperson, what's the best tips for what to do. Are passwords in Lastpass still safe or should we change all the passwords? Or simply change the master? Or should we migrate to something else?
I've thought about migrating before but frankly any password manager will have breaches...
I wonder if having some sort of dependency scanner giving more upfront visibility would help clear things up. Then you'd be able to get a sense of what the composition of issues might look like. Seems like there's so many scanners out there that something must solve this.
Such a cool article. There's a similar movie about finding Microbiome deep in the Amazon Rainforest. It's called The Last Tepui, Alex Honnold leads a team to go climbing and look for wildlife and bacteria on the ridge of a mountain deep in the rainforest. Crazy hiking and climbing! But they find some really amazing species.