plot twist: they leave it up, collect telemetry to match and understand the data behind pirating vs. owned emulation, find it useful to open the platform, focus on services, and build their business to 10x on software almost exclusively
not probable, but that would be interesting to see
I mean, is anyone really surprised by this? LLMs (as I understand them today) only predict the next token based on previous tokens, so there's no actual logical cohesion to what they produce.
Hey everyone, Jk here. I cofounded Jetty Labs to build data tools. The tl;dr here is that data teams use a lot of tools and understanding how access is configured across the growing stack is complex and exhausting.
Jetty is a tiny peek at our broader vision of simplifying data privacy and we'd love you to give it a try and offer any feedback on the product.
I won't be surprised if DE ends up just falling under the "software engineering" umbrella as the jobs grow closer together. With hybrid OLAP/OLTP databases becoming more popular, the skillset delta is definitely smaller than it used to be. Data Engineers are higher leverage assets to an organization than they ever have been before.
I love this book! There is a lot of abstraction today that most software workers benefit from, but I think there is a lot of value in understanding lower-level mechanisms.
Isn't this... what everyone (that uses in-app browsers) does? I just assumed that's a big reason why one would use in-app over sending a person to their native environment, which is decidedly a better browsing experience.
The concept seems cool and the price seems reasonable if the quality is high. But how does this translate to value for subscribers? It seems like the company is treating curation as the core value prop but I see it as more of a means to some end.
not probable, but that would be interesting to see