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As someone who had never used a monorepo before and wanted to set one up for the first time, https://www.pantsbuild.org/ seemed intuitive to me and of an apparently good provenance. Their Slack community also answered every question I had and righted my wrongs 100% of the time, which went a long way.


Oh, boy. The Fool is one of my favorite characters in fiction and poor, poor Fitz. I picked the original series up on a recommendation from a college friend. I went in thinking I was too old for a "YA Fantasy" book to make my heart ache. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Took me right back to bawling over Feist's Riftwar Saga as a young teen.


Ishmael by Daniel Quinn. As for why it bit and stung me: IYKYK, I guess? Any reasons more than that tend to start flame wars.


That’s another good one. Sadly, I’ve learned not to talk about Ishmael (or Daniel Quinn) online but yeah, if you know you know.


[flagged]


Do you think the book is fascistic? If so, maybe it’s helpful to explain why.


The book is claustrophobic but otherwise forgettable. These comments, however, are paranoiac and chauvinistic.


Hahaha this is my first direct brush with Godwin's law. Thanks, rexpop!


Hahaha!

> Never believe that [fascists] are completely unaware of the absurdity of their replies. They know that their remarks are frivolous, open to challenge. But they are amusing themselves, for it is their adversary who is obliged to use words responsibly, since he believes in words. They [presume] the right to play. They even like to play with discourse for, by giving ridiculous reasons, they discredit the seriousness of their interlocutors. They delight in acting in bad faith, since they seek not to persuade by sound argument but to intimidate and disconcert.

— Sartre (1944)


This is an unwarranted appeal to authority (and quoting a person that colluded with Simone de Beauvoir to groom young women into predatory relationships).

Honestly, I don't understand what kind of effect you hope to achieve by calling random people Nazis except self-validation, but I guess I could turn your Sartre quote around to apply to [autistic pedants].


I am not in the least amused.


So does "local data stay local" or what? I mean, obviously Trello cards are stored in Atlassian's cloud somewhere and Slack convos are somewhere in Salesforce's series of tubes. I guess what I mean is, if "Muddy works in the background to keep track of the timeline and uses a LLM to continuously organize apps and keep everything on to date", does this mean Muddy ships off local data to some remote API to get it's work done? Or if I'm only ever working within my local network, is the data I'm working with inside the Muddy context as safe as my local network can make it?


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