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The US has seen six governments since Woodstock ‘99, alternating the ruling party almost perfectly every four years: Clinton, Bush, Obama, Trump, Biden and Trump again.

Venezuela has seen only two presidents in 26 years, Chavez and Maduro, and both belong to the same ruling party.


So have Russia, Israel, Egypt and several other nations. I don't see the US cutting military aid to the latter two because of a lack of diverse electoral outcomes.


And some US allies have seen no change, I’m hoping that’s not a metric for which countries to invade.


You have stated a fact but provided no conclusion. Please finish your thought.


exactly, there’s no conclusion, it’s been almost three decades.

It’s nice to have a different ruling party every few years and not just every three decades like in Venezuela(so far).

Maybe Venezuelas want to give their oil to another 3rd-party that is not Iran, Cuba, Russia or China for a change.


So, in other words, you believe we should attack Venezuela because they need a regime change and we need their oil.

I have some choice words for that, but the mods wouldn't like it.


You’re not providing a conclusion. Please finish your thought…


with Tailscale Lock you have a lot more control, you can also self-host your coordinator server which is an alternative even mentioned in the service docs[0]

[0] https://tailscale.com/kb/1226/tailnet-lock


yes, one word: IAM


does DynamoDB run on EC2? if I read it right, EC2 depends on DynamoDB.


There are circular dependencies within AWS, but also systems to account for this (especially for cold starting).

Also there really is no one AWS, each region is its own (Now more then ever before, where some systems weren't built to support this).


> Worth the upgrade? 100 percent.

First time I noticed such claim in an iPhone announcement.


agree, also I believe box.com was smaller than Dropbox and it seems like they’re still alive, it’s crazy to me.


Furthermore, they're both public listed companies.


This post feels written by AI, but something caught my attention.

> But they made one technical choice that would haunt them forever.

> They built it on Solaris. Developers wanted Linux.

Recently I’ve seen how TrueNAS Core(FreeBSD-based) is being replaced by TrueNAS Scale(Linux-based)[0] and they ended up with an unarguably better product.

Meanwhile Oxide picked Solaris over Linux[1].

I vaguely remember what it was like to work with Joyner Public Cloud, but it was all an abstraction over APIs just like the Oxide rack, but in terms of GTM speed, it seems like Joyent lost some momentum trying to replicate what AWS found in Linux coming from Xen.

Oxide knows what they’re doing and they have some smart folks over there, however, I still consider a bold move not to pick Linux these days.

[0] https://www.truenas.com/community/threads/truenas-scale-anno...

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39180706


Wasn’t Joyent set up as a Solaris first stack alternative after Sun’s acquisition ?. Meaning they were Solaris first and the solutions built on top came after.


me too, what are you building?


A sort of boutique mobile-first proxy, with emphasis on geography spread/accuracy. I've been running my own proxies for a long time via friends and families networks, but in those instances security/safety wasn't as big of a deal. Yourself?


that’s cool, I’m working on branded artifact delivery. Docker, Go, NPM, Pypi repos delivered on free custom sub-domains. Vultr BGP services doing the trick so far.


And my solution is primarily SOCKS5 reverse, on top of tailscale (moving away from ts, although no complaints) with lots of routing in the middle.


Awesome, that sounds like it could be really useful.


Rust can cross-compile, yes, but is not as seamless. For example, Rust can not cross-compile Windows binaries from Linux without external support like MinGW.

Go can cross-compile from Linux to Windows, Darwin and FreeBSD without requiring any external tooling.


Zitadel is switching its license from Apache to AGPL3, that’s at least one difference. The license change caught my attention because I also use Zitadel, this project is MIT.

[0] https://zitadel.com/blog/zitadel-v3-announcement


I think (not sure though) there is another difference to add here. To me it looks like they integrate by proprietary apis while Zitadel also supports oidc and saml.

But I have not checked their docs, so I could be wrong.


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