We’re going to have AI building Drupal sites soon. The platform is well architected for this. Most of the work is generating configuration files that scaffold the site. There are already AI integrations for content. The surface area is relatively small, and the options are well defined in code and documentation. I would not be surprised if we pull this off first. It’s one of the current project initiatives.
The coding part is still a hard problem. AI for front end and module code is still pretty primitive. LLMs are getting more helpful with that over time.
If your identity is stolen, at best the company is sued and pays for a few years of credit monitoring. I don’t think this is adequate, given the potential consequences. We need a better systemic solution for this.
But seriously, I picked up FreeBSD a few years ago when centos went proprietary. Just got back into fiddling with the box recently, and great timing!
I’ve set up web servers in Linux many times. The differences between distros makes learning and implementing things a bit more fragmented. FreeBSD still gives you options, but feels like the path is more straightforward.
1. old computer found in a dumpster. Using it to learn about sysadmin and networking.
2. I installed it when centos was dead and I was looking for a stable os for a web server. My main computer runs Linux Mint.
3. It’s the first one I tried. Might check out open bds and dragonfly when I get into hosting and virtualization.
4. I’m just limited by lack of knowledge. But I like that there’s a more common path to follow, with great documentation. For the things I have working now, I feel like I have a better handle on my config choices vs in Linux distros I don’t always know if I’m doing things the Linux way or the Ubuntu way.
5. Several nights and weekends playing with ancient hardware and alternative software.
The coding part is still a hard problem. AI for front end and module code is still pretty primitive. LLMs are getting more helpful with that over time.