Exactly. Comparing open source to begging on the street? Yeah, sure, pretty accurate comparison if you are living in a parallel universe where street beggars run the world's infrastructure.
I guess it is pointless to argue about what topics are the most relevant. This "vital articles" list seems completely arbitraty and, frankly, not very important.
The author has a point, but one of the defining characteristics of HN (in my opinion) is that sometimes comments are more valuable than the actual link.
Some HN comments are incredibly insightful and well informed, and some threads have real historical value (i.e. the original Dropbox and Redis posts).
Does someone keep an archive of legendary HN comments that you could share?
The default cross-origin blocking behavior is useful for many things, such prevention of data exfiltration via XSS vulnerabilties.
CORS is a way to relax this behavior.
I read the PDF version and donated 10 dollars a few months ago. The book is worth more than that, but given the numbers he expose I didn't even feel guilty.
> UX should be a mindset, not a step in the process
Every specialist in every branch of software engineering thinks like that. Designers, architects, testers, compliance people, everyone seems to think the software development process should be framed according to their priorities. Who knows, maybe this is a healthy way to establish a balance of power.
Yes. And what they mean is that the developers who actually build the thing should also think about UX, architecture, testing and compliance. It is all about moving everything on the devs plate.
yes, that is what I mean. If your bucket name contains a dot, you will no longer be able to access it with https with an S3 VPC Endpoint. (using http or going to cloudfront instead of the S3 VPC Endpoint would still work)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_CBF318nBY