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jdalsgaard

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jdalsgaard
·4 miesiące temu·discuss
> Because the remaining 10% is what required most of the CS team’s time. They built an FAQ you can talk to.

These days it's hard to get people to read an email longer then 5 lines - yet people are super excited about abundant masses of text generated by LLMs. It does not compute....
jdalsgaard
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
Yes, it supports it. But is fundamentally not based on the idea of zero-cost abstraction from where I see a lot of Rust features being derived from. So crates I pull in must obey it too - it's not optional (you do have unsafe to watch out for, but that's an easy grep).
jdalsgaard
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
I would tend to disagree; fundamental to Rust is the concept of zero-cost abstraction. Swift does not do that.

I my view, and I might be wrong, many features of Rust are chosen specifically to have the language comply to the zero-cost rule. Such as the ownership model.
jdalsgaard
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
Most tools, frameworks and articles in IT, SaaS in particular, are about spinning up things. It is what people find exciting.

Work a few years in Ops and you learn that spinning up things is not a big part of your work. It's maintenance, such as deleting stuff.

Unfortunately this process is the hardest, and there's very little to help you do it right. Many tools, framework and vendors don't even have proper support for it.

Some even recommend 'rinse and repeat' instead of adjusting what you have - and this method is not great if you value uptime, nor if you have state that you want to preserve, such as customer data :-)

Deleting stuff, shutting services down, turning off servers - those are hard tasks in IT.
jdalsgaard
·9 miesięcy temu·discuss
I second that; only running it for personal use on a few domains, but handles all the complexity _extremely_ easily.