Tech brands like Logitech, Nothing, and Microsoft are adding AI-related features to their gadgets, but are these features truly necessary? The rush to integrate AI raises questions about the actual benefits for users.
We're so excited to bring you the 30th edition of Thoughtworks Technology Radar today.
Fifteen years. Thirty editions.
It's been a long journey but well worth it — thank you for reading!
They only provide a Dockerfile because it's so convoluted and patched together that it would be impossible to create a decent guide on how to make this stuff work without revealing just how much it's all held together by duct tape. Still, taking a peek at the Dockerfile will clearly reveal the chaos at play.
Everything runs in separate containers, as it should, and they have automatic restarts, as they should. But then they're so tightly bound together with, you guessed it, duct tape, that when one of them fails, the container just restarts automatically, leaving the user wondering why everything failed, with only a cryptic error message.
The main container is controlled by Supervisor - which is necessary because everything crashes very often, but the end user doesn't notice because Supervisor restarts the services. To outsiders, everything works fine (but occasionally throws some errors).
In short, the current trend is to sweep the dirt under the rug. A trendy rug, though!
New Video for U, talking about Honor & Porsche Designed Honor Magic V2 RSR Porsche Design
Powered by the Snapdragon #sd8gen2 and one of the thinnest foldable on the market today
Enjoy the video. Snapdragon #honor#TechTrends#HONORMagicV2#bbtg
Well, it took a bit more effort than I expected, but I'm completely off Substack as of today.
I dunno if Better Bits, the supporting site for my on-again, off-again book will make a reappearance elsewhere. But Net API Notes, the API industry newsletter I've written since 2015, can now be found at http://netapinotes.com.