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Really great article, thank you author for writing it. I think the first 2 implementations are what I think as interpreted. The next two, not sure. For the last, there is no doubt of compiled. But that is just my understanding.


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Thanks for the feedback! Op here. I'll definitely consider adding the guest access back. Login is requried to be able to save all of your preferences on the server. Also compared to other simulator that requires a 5Gb of download and signup, this is much lower bar?


Congratulations ! Thank you for sharing. Would you be open to share you this idea turned into reality? How you found the necessity of the product?


Thanks and sure, I work for a company which I'm responsible for the administration of Microsoft 365 and app development, they needed this, so I made it free online and a lot of other organizations started using it so I had to change to paid due to the server costs (the app does a lot of HTTP REST requests).


There is the video edition: https://youtu.be/fCtZWGhQBvo

Anyway, excellent write from Mary Rose and she is an exceptional presenter as well!


I would choose Rust. Today it might be that the market has more jobs on C++ and there are more codebases.

In the future, those codebases will only be the legacy ones and you will end up doing more maintenance with C++.

With Rust your investment of today will pay off in a few years.

Deciding what to learn today is an investment decision and you should look into what you think the future will look like. To me it looks Rusty. :-)


I think a valid concern might be - in 5 or 10 years, C++ still remains, just like Java and other "boring" languages. However, Rust might have been replaced by the next "Rust". That environment is still somewhat in flux.


I agree with you, it might turn out that C++ outlives Rust. I am seeing more codebases being created from scratch in Rust nowadays. We are just making bets on the opposite side. I guess we both agree that the deciding factor should be what you think the future will look like in 5+ years. Nobody knows what will happen in 5 years, then it is a bet or an investment decision you make.


I'm sure exactly the same comment can be found on Slashdot in 1997 with "Java" instead of "Rust"


They did a really nice job creating an awesome experience by having picked up a nice set of tools and bundling them together. IMHO It is the first true full stack Javascript/Typescript framework that thought on all the important details: logging, great tutorial, community that helps, etc.


Thanks! Our mission is to help more startups explore more territory, more quickly. We're hoping to achieve this by integrating all the bits you need up front so you have less work to do on your framework, and can spend your precious time building and scaling your app or startup!


In all industries there are people without ethics, the same happen in our industry. Most people have ethics and standards and I completely agree with you that we should not generalize it.


Don't get me wrong, but it is because you don't like the ideas presented or because you don't like him?

I think there is a problem when we cancel ideas because of whom is telling them.


He makes a career of telling developers what businesses want him to tell them.

In my personal opinion he lacks experience with actual development and skill to even talk about code, let alone good development practices. He is a book author, not a developer sharing his expertise.

He spouts hot air for money.


Is being 1st or 2nd place in this matter to celebrate? I live in Brazil and this is something that really sucks.


He was being ironic


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