I'd rather him resurect that space game that was teased a while back..
The premise was something along the lines of the sleep timer had a byte overflow error or something and instead of sleeping 10 years, it ended up sleeping thousands...
He could also use his money to fund promising game studios like RocketWerkz to build the engine for that game. Kitten Space Agency has a bit of a problem with end game content. To this day you can play KSP1 if all you want to do is manual control of spacecraft, but lategame you want to launch multiple space craft simultaneously, which means they need to be autonomous.
Most of the postings for backend positions at Netflix I've seen call out nodejs. Can I assume they do both? Is one legacy and the other newer stuff, or are they more complimentary?
Things are certainly more of a blend now than what's presented in this presentation, but the presenter is a big Java platform guy here. I would say ~70% of the services I interact with on a day to day basis are Java, another 20% in Node, and then the last 10% is a hodgepodge of Python, Go, and more esoteric stuff.
It varies from team to team; the "Studio" organization that supports creating Netflix content does lots of nodeJS due to the perception that it's faster to iterate on a UI and API together if they're both in the same language. On my team, we're very close to 50/50 due to managing a bunch of backend, business process type systems (Java), and a very complex UI (with a NodeJS backing service to provide a graphql query layer). Regardless, the tooling is really quite good, so interacting with a Node service is roughly identical to interacting with a Java service is roughly identical to interacting with anything else. We lean into code generation for clients pretty heavily, so graphQL is a good fit, but gRPC and Swagger are still used pretty frequently.
I remember my Old Samsung's and HTC thunderbolt all have replaceable batteries, as well as the Motorola Droid which was super cool..
Not going to these were the early ones. I think starting with the S8 or so they stopped letting you replace the battery. I'm on pixels now. And my Pixel 6 doesn't have a replaceable battery...
What about permissions? A hard part about developing on AWS was grtting the right permsission set that gave enough access, but nothing more. Im sure the other cloud providers have similar systems to IAM
You're not wrong, it's one of the most difficult parts and definitely something we're trying to solve with Nitric. Here is the overview doc about how we handle this problem https://nitric.io/docs/reference/access-control would love your feedback.
Talk about constraints, i work in the back of my ( albeit long ) pantry, with very little ventilation, and an adhoc light setup for now. The desk and chair are nice, and the desk can raise for the very few times i want to stand for a while.
Mine got taken over almost a year ago. They reset the password bypassing secondary email checks and Facebook as other peole have said just doesnt care.
I've contacted a few colleagues that work there and haven't seen anything happen.
My wife messaged the account and said at least take down the photos of our kids, and the person actually responded saying they would, so now most of it is private.
I am a white male, but according to Facebook I'm a young asian female... The background picture is still my house though.
Agreed. That was a large source of "loyalty" for older generations. My wife's father will retire soon with a generous pension - one of the last of the factory workers who had a pension. Employees aren't loyal and that is largely a self-inflicted issue.
The premise was something along the lines of the sleep timer had a byte overflow error or something and instead of sleeping 10 years, it ended up sleeping thousands...
( Edit for spelling I hope )