Bun has some niceties that I appreciate in some contexts, but I prefer Deno quite a bit for projects today, as well as for the future of the project. Web standards are a great foundation to lean on (in my opinion).
One thing that I'm skeptic on these articles is the numbers on how plants are grown is not clear. You don't have division between corn or soy vs hydroponic. Is quite concerning that the affirmation of changing diets and consumer behavior will be the only thing.
There is impact on growing plants with lack of healthier pollination, or simply not destroying the ground to avoid a huge amount of CO2 to the air, or even further assuming there is a zero impact of fertilizer on Greenhouse gases in general.
I empathize with the demand change on jobs that AI will create. And its really difficult to predict what the future will be, not majorly for its uncertainty but mostly because the systems thinking we need to adapt to match this new era of reasoning based on what a probabilistic model say is good or not.
The main issue with "AI should never existed" is kind of the same of "go to a University to learn". We will look behind in 10-20 years and we will question why Universities were focusing in the wrong aspects of learning vs reasoning, creativity vs memorization.
This will affect every industry, every career, every person. The focus on the wrong side of the coin is creating the polarization of "good vs bad". Which is not far from what we have today. This is beyond, this is a new way of interacting with computers that is even more human only because it commoditize things that previously were totally own for some institutions, countries, or even just not public.
Agree completely with this. This is what I’m trying to understand, and perhaps put some extra effort on creating something that can debunk the fallacy of SEO.
As a developer I feel we have reached a point where this shouldn’t be considered a service anymore.
Well, part of the reason why I feel there are so many companies is because no one can _prove_ what's actually going on. So they spend a few months doing research and selling their knowledge as a service to clients - it would be the same thing you would do if you pursue this path. I don't see an issue with it, people sell what they know to others in all professions (now that I think about it more).
Both open-sourced. I will say one of the best things about Postman was the Proxy support, but either way doesn't works with the iPhone and other stuff.
Yes, they have heard about cross origin restrictions. Postwoman gets around them by having an (optional) proxy that actually makes the request on the users behalf.
Whether or not you think this is a good idea is another matter, but it works.