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I have a similar problem, large monorepo, things have become really bad lately to the point that the cursor is unresponsive. The only workaround I have found is opening each folder of the monorepo in its own IDE instance


Feel this so hard. The opposite is also true where you have a micro-service architecture and cursor faceplants in workspaces with multiple repos. We ended up building cortex.build partly because of this exact pain. Our context engine builds a git-aware dependency/provenance graph so it can stay local and only pull the relevant slice across a massive repo or dozens of smaller ones.

EV motorbikes are already very popular with criminals in the UK. They make the perfect getaway vehicle as they are so quick and stealthy.

It’s very intimidating to see a group riding these things on the pavement and pulling wheelies, all wearing balaclavas.


These guys are a bit of a problem in Edinburgh, but not an EV-specific one; before they were using trail bikes, which were an additional nuisance with the noise.

Not sure what level of intrusive surveillance would be needed to deal with this.


Helm shines when you’re consuming vendor charts (nginx-ingress, cert-manager, Prometheus stack). It’s basically a package manager for k8s. Add a repo, pin a version, set values, and upgrade/rollback as one unit. For third-party infra, the chart’s values.yaml provides a fairly clean and often well documented interface


Yeah, I agree. Creating and maintaining helm charts sucks, but using them (if they are properly made and exposes everything you want to edit in the values.yaml) is a great experience with gitops tools such as FluxCD or helmfile.


I used to be a team that hosted internal enterprise services and this was the main reason we used helm. Someone wrote charts for these self-hosted applications.

(Not all of them were written in a sane manner, but that's just how it goes)


The UK has council tax, which is quite similar to a property tax


It's capped. The Duke of Westminster is not paying 1.8% on his substantial feudal holdings in London.


In the UK there is a trend of modifying motorbike exhausts and you can hear them from a mile away.


M&S outsourced over half of its IT team to Tata Consultancy in 2018. Looks like they are now reaping what they sowed

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-42629522.amp


So they saved £30 million a year and now losing estimated £40 a week (not to mention reputation and future opportunity loss due to lower customer confidence). They have almost wiped out all the savings.

If this is the reason, then this was a very bad deal for them.


netty-tcnative can remove the need for a Java keystore in Netty based applications https://netty.io/wiki/forked-tomcat-native.html


> I just let the migration assistant do the needful

but will it revert back if things go wrong?


It leaves the "source computer" alone, so if it blows up you can always just start again.

I never trade in my old computer, even if I'm going to sell or get rid of it (donate) I keep it around for a month or so to make sure everything's working.


It reverts back and it does it at its earliest.


Dear, this was gold.


You might want to sew a Canadian flag on your bag just in case


Fords are very popular in the UK and my Mondeo hasn’t missed a beat in years. the European models aren’t made in US which speaks volumes


> the European models aren’t made in US which speaks volumes

No wonder; the US tanks could just roll over one of the reasonably-sized european cars...


not to be a contrarian but I'm assuming that's European made Fords? Because, in America, Ford right now leads in total recall expenditures of all manufacturers. It's been an issue of theirs for two or three years now.


Yeah, I meant cars made for US market from US brands. True, that Ford is US brand with strong European presence, but I think the model line is quite different. Jeeps getting more popular in EU, since it's part of Stellantis now (company headquartered in EU), but has engines for European market etc.


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