In my country literally everyone still uses Facebook and Messenger for that simple reason: everyone they know uses it.I've always been against Discord and I miss the Mumble+IRC days, but Discord is just the default now and it's not going away
Like what?SSL is so simple and automatic with certbot.Then there's CORS if you really need to load resources from other sites, but you won't need that for small sites.Making the backend is easier than ever. It's much harder to make security mistakes nowadays.And if you don't know what you're doing, just ask an LLM if you made any fuckups..
Corporate servers will usually have some degree of SIEM implemented, and at least automatic audit log monitoring.
This. People are overly paranoid nowadays.I have had SSH open directly to my main PC for 15 years and never had any issues except spam logins. Just disallow password logins and you're fine. Same with :443 to my nginx.
My homedir is an infernal hellhole of junk accumulated over the past 15 years and I wouldn't have it any other way
I wonder why it's so different in the US compared to my country (Denmark). McDonald's has been awarded "best workplace" for several years in a row.We do have much stronger regulations on employee welfare, mostly from unions. And of course much higher pay.
What other societies have similar levels of customer entitlement? I think this is mostly prominent in areas with great inequality.I have nothing to back this up with except for my own experiences though
The reality is that most backends don't use compiled languages, but stuff like PHP, Java and Python.NodeJS scores very high on performance, concurrency, and especially IO, in that category.And calling it abysmal compared to compiled languages is not fair, but yes, there are much better alternatives.
No, that's not how compiling works. And yes, 6GB is wild. If I don't patch in a month, the download might be 2GB and the net will still be smaller.I don't think I could get close to my Windows installation even if I installed literally every single package..
I just see it as defending free speech