Half of this are wrong though
Half of this are wrong though
Thank you! I couldn’t stand to hear this anti mitochondria slander.
Slow and delayed is not the same thing, Dark Souls enemies won’t wait 3 seconds mid attack to throw you off.
Have you played their previous games? It’s only an issue in Elden Ring.
There’s another season?
Factory farming
I thought you were talking about Jojo for the first half and was ready to defend part 2.
Yeah, I’ve been only to Sydney and Melbourne and don’t remember seeing that, but I might be wrong.
Never seen this myself. Where are you from? It might be a regional thing.
Does he always hold the same rotisserie chicken or does he switch it up every once in a while?
I’m asking because I feel like supporting him but want to make sure he has plans for the future.
That’s an interesting way of saying you’ve never left the US.
They have good taste
I really like the food, movies and most people I’ve met from India are extremely nice.
What I don’t like is the huge inequality, treatment of women and the lack of hygiene in the big cities.
It’s definitely a country that has been on it’s way up for a while now, things could be really good for India in the future.
I see, I’m definitely biased towards micro services after years of dealing with horribly made monoliths but I see what you mean.
At the end of the day I think both approaches have pros and cons.
Micro services are a lot easier to scale out since they behave independently from each other, you can have different levels of replication and concurrency based on the traffic that each part of your system receives.
Something that I think is pretty huge is that, done right, you end up with a bunch of smaller databases, meaning you can save a lot of money by having different levels of security and replication depending on how sensitive the data is.
This last part also helps with data residency issues, which is becoming a pretty big deal for the EU.
I somewhat agree but I find that the added complexity is segmented, you shouldn’t need to care about anything but the contracts themselves when working within a micro service.
That means less code to take into account, less spaghetti and an easier time with local testing.
Micro services also have a ton of advantages at the infrastructure level.
Exactly! Monoliths can work in theory but, in practice, end up becoming bloated messes since it’s just easier to do so.
It’s really not, you’ll be thankful you have it once the system grows too big.
Anything past the Fox years isn’t worth it in my opinion.
A latte is much whiter than a flat white even, it barely has any coffee while flat white is closer to 50/50.