Wondering why all those console.log calls ended up in the presumably final version of the exploit. All the more chances for someone to see what they were doing.
Depends how you look at it. What can't be denied is that they removed the performance limitations for benchmarking apps and this is the real issue - you don't get that kind of performance in real life usage.
It sounded like different apps were throttled different amounts which means that you need to measure the performance of different apps separately. If you wanted to throttle a benchmark, what level of throttling should it get?
If we're talking AWS, then I'd go for AWS Fargate. You can push your Docker image, built via GH actions, to their registry (ECR). From there on you spin up a task definition based on the image and then a new ECS service.
In front of it you can have an ALB for load balancing, but that's optional, although recommended.
If you want to do IPC between two console apps like this one, then yes, something along those lines. However, if you're thinking about exposing an endpoint over HTTP(S) then you can create directly a Web API project - which runs in a Web Host (as opposed to a generic host) and provides the entire infrastructure for request processing.
Yup, the same experience for me as well at least in what concerns the flood, not so sure about quality. This drags the prices down and I see many clients offering $5-$15/h for short-medium term jobs.
I disagree. There are numerous people, myself included, on /r/mechanicalkeyboards that have way better experiences with Realforce/HHKB keyboards and their quality. I use daily a RF 87 for the past 5 years and I've had no issues with it.
I only regret not getting a Norbauer case for it, despite its price.
Several years ago, I worked at a call center that had very old equipment. The wornout membrane keyboards created a great deal of pain in my hands with each keystroke. After that I became a believer in mechanical keyboards. The pain went away.
Norbauer still does releases afaik. In fact it looks like polycarb Norbaforces are still available. I'm pretty sure I saw a run of the metal housings earlier in the year, too.
Not sure if you mean the Gen 1 or Gen 2 T14s, but as I pointed out in the article, both the T14s Gen 2 and P14s Gen 2 can be configured with up to 48GB of RAM, albeit with the lopsided arrangement of 16GB being soldered on while the remaining 32GB are in the upgradable slot as a regular SODIMM.
I really feel an arrangement like this should be outlawed, it really makes little to sense to not have both be regular, upgradable SODIMMs like almost every other normal laptop.