The browser is a sandbox with a bunch of discoverable features. Those features exist for the user but a side effect is they leak data which individually is probably not interesting but collectively is a fingerprint.
To be less of a fingerprint you'd need to remove JS from the entire web.
Neat idea. This probably has the disadvantage of coupling deployment to a service. For example how do you scale up or red/green (you'd need the thing that does this to be aware of the push).
Edit: that thing exists it is uncloud. Just found out!
That said it's a tradeoff. If you are small, have one Hetzner VM and are happy with simplicity (and don't mind building images locally) it is great.
I worked in that area a while back. It is (was then) a quiet part of Sydney just commercial offices and business that supports it. Despite being a fairly central location. It's a beautiful place to hang out you can walk to harbour views.
Thanks. Your nuanced version is better. In that version I can still ignore most of LinkedIn and Twitter and assume there will still be a need for people. Not just at OMGAD (OpenAI...) but at thousands of companies.
Looks like you are putting a derivative behind a paywall though, no? I think quid pro quo let pudiklubi publish your work too? Some kind of open license?
I thought debugging was table stakes. It isn't always the answer. If a lot is going on logs can be excellent (plus grep or an observability tool)
However debugging is an essential tool in the arsenal. If something is behaving oddly even the best REPL can't match debugging as a dev loop (maybe lisp excepted).
I even miss the ability to move the current execution point back in .NET now I use Go and JS. That is a killer feature. Edit and continue even more so!
Then next level is debugging unit tests. Saved me hours.
Polite way here is similar to inversion of control. It's a good idea but you need a real thing test somewhere but that can be running the program in its entirety, or using the facade end to end against the real interface for a spot check.
It would need to do something like spit out each frequency in a different direction then you use light material in circle that flaps when sound energy is transmitted in that direction. Sounds possible. Analog computer of sorts.