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43
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • This is not good. Thanks for highlighting this. I flagged this for my company’s enterprise risk management committee to consider and act upon.

  • It's a good idea to try to wait for the full renovation. Have a look at this, it might inspire a stopgap measure.

  • Yeah, they aren't great machines. I switched to Bosch.

  • Indeed it does, but I still found it an interesting read.

  • That looks fabulous. I'm going to give that a try for certain. Thanks for posting.

  • They will find something to moan about, probably several somethings. Most of it will be made up bullshit non-issues or things they do themselves when they are in power. This is the Party of Grievance.

  • A lot of so-called low code can be a trap. I'm less afraid of SaaS so long as there exists an equivalent on-prem option. SaaS has a place for sure. SaaS-only is a concern, I agree. I agree with a lot of the assertions of this article, except I would probably first recommend Camunda 7 or 8 over SWF. Camunda is developer friendly, open source and has more mature offerings. A large part of the value of adopting process orchestration tools is the ability to support a model -> run -> monitor & optimize type of closed loop cycle. Camunda does this very well.

  • Sheer dangerous idiocy. Don't just moan about this. Act! EFF makes it easy at that link and it really does make a difference.

  • The final product is dried and harvested, with minimized water, land and energy use, Galy says.

    That's why. Cotton is notoriously bad in all of those categories. To that I would add the most cotton grown commercially is paired with a lot of pesticides as well.

  • It's at best minimally entertaining. Obviously, they have used the books to inspire a completely different story.

  • I'm done with corporate platforms

  • I installed it and took a quick look. It reminds me of Obsidian's approach. I got excited about that, too, but I found it very burdensome to use in practice. What I need is a sort of life log that grabs a lot of stuff quietly from integrations and that I can then further augment (for things like meeting notes). The problem with all of these graph approaches (for me) is that they become burdensome to manage.

  • LogSeq

    I never heard of it until now. I'm a veteran of trying out and dumping so many note taking solutions. I'm certain to try this one, too! Maybe I'll finally find The One.

  • Exactly what I was thinking and planned to say here when I came to the comments. Well said. This is Meal Team Six stuff for kids who grew up watching too many bad action movies.