Very interesting, I had a go with Ghidra and AWS Amazon Q, used it to reverse the video feed on a toy drone. I did not think to look for GhidraMCP, would of made it a lot quicker.
In a company, there may me multiple teams, each doing there own projects, PaaS can be within the same company and provide a common way to do stuff without each team having to start from scratch each time.
When I graduated, my first project was to make a UK LED based wait indicator. The problem was, the standard specified "white" light. At the time while LED's where made using UV LED's and phosphors was used to make it white. This meant that for 100 LED's, the coat would be about £100 just for the LED's. In the end we got the specification changed to include a yellow, (we showed that a tungsten light bulb running at 45vac is very yellow anyway, so it was more a correction in the spec than a change)
I work for a large company and even before remote working, all company laptops had to run CrowdStrike, this sounds very similar. However the rules where very clear, no using non-company laptops for work, this included contractors etc...
I really respect people who can use emacs (and vim, vi etc...) they wiz around doing allsorts and make it look effortless.
The only reason I have not tried is I seem to spend most of my time thinking about the change, and the time saved is easily wiped out by the time taked to re-write the line 5 times.
I have used TaskJuggler alot in the past, however that was more in a waterfall developement where we needed to plan the whole project over 6 months to 3 years, For agile I have not really used it, a SCRUM/Other board tends to fit better. But I still really like TaskJuggler
Same here, it's very useful for waterfall scenarios but I've never used it for agile planning and I'm not sure it would have a place in that kind of workflow.
Also, for medium-sized projects and up I've found its planning heuristics some times produce pretty bad plans (in terms of deadlines and resource utilization), and you have to guide it towards a better solution, by adding artificial constraints.
But having a project plan that I can express in the form of tasks and constraints, and that I can fully track using git, makes up for any of TaskJuggler's shortcomings.