Best marathon runners can do it in "conventional" running shoes [0], but I agree it's easier to find the better technique barefoot or in barefoot shoes.
Running barefoot forces you to improve your technique in line with this description. [0] There's also a sizeable market of "barefoot shoes" that's between being barefoot and the regular running shoes, with the manufacturers trying to convince us buying such shoes is the solution. The gait issue become more obvious (and painful) in barefoot shoes, but you can adjust your technique in mass-market running shoes as well.
But the Gateway API has only been generally available for two years now. And the last time I checked, most managed K8S solutions recommend the Ingress API while Gateway support is still experimental.
Not any more - nowadays being aero is more important and that adds quite a bit of weight. And disc brake sets are also heavier than brake pads used to be.
A democratic government can set up an independent emergency response organization that doesn’t need government involvement to declare and respond to an emergency.
You can build the first pipeline with oneliners, but as long as you want to keep optimizing the pipelines, the yaml code will keep piling up with CI vendor's specific approaches to job selection, env variable delivery, caching, output sharing between jobs and so on.
Kinetic energy increases with the square of the velocity, so in a head-on collision everything not buckled on the back seat becomes a missile heading towards the passenger seats. Even a bag with a laptop is dangerous and you should put it in the foot compartment. And that's like 3kg while an average person will weigh around 70kg.
You get to choose either the mind-numbing churn of constant updates, the risk of updates piling up and becoming unmanageable, or shipping software with vulnerabilities. None of these options sounds fun.
This would be just to allow you to connect to the server. If there was a vulnerable sshd on port 22, an adversary would have to know the port knocking sequence to connect to sshd and run the exploit.
Due to (async) code reviews slowing down the development, we've adopted some workflows described at https://martinfowler.com/articles/ship-show-ask.html and it's working out pretty great. The committer decides how many approvals they need to merge a pull request, based on how confident they are about the code they wrote. This allows us to quickly merge small incremental improvements that would otherwise be bundled in a crowded feature pull request.
[0] https://marathonhandbook.com/kipchoge-running-form/