I'm getting so annoyed at companies requiring a phone number and then forcing MFA on me with it.
If you're going to force MFA on users give them another option besides receiving a text message or phone call. I don't want to live with my phone attached to my body at all time, sometimes I just want to log in without having to go find where I left it. I have Yubikey, let me use that, or worst case, send a code to my email.
CodeQL will do this for some languages, the kind of bugs I've seen it identify have been pretty impressive, I'm sure there are some other static analyzers that can do this as well.
I don't know why someone would want to waste time arguing about code style.
Standardizing on things like `cargo fmt`, `go fmt`, and `terraform fmt` remove a ton of nitpicking out the gate. The javascript world can't seem to make up their mind though (jslint is rarely used these days, jshint died, I think eslint is the thing now?)
I see the business befit in serverless in a lot of ways but I don't think its necessarily a good thing for developers, its a good thing for business in some cases but its highly proprietary.
> I don’t even want to mention the crap cake that is KaiOS...
Oh please do, its absolutely horrid. How are they even keeping up with Firefox security updates? The only conclusion I could come to, when investigating this, was that they aren't, and when I asked the company in a comment on their public blog how they were handling it they deleted my comment.
I was hoping Lightphone would be a strong contender for a non-smartphone but the reviews so far have been mixed and there seems to be a few serious issues (e.g. battery life), also there's no 2FA which honestly is one of the main things I use my phone for these days (not everything supports hardware 2FA)
I've seen this trip up people in the past, in one case a CI/CD system running Linux was used to produce a project deployed to a mostly windows environment this didn't cause any issues until the day a developer added a binary module. Honestly, I'm surprised it worked as long as it did, it took a little over a year before anyone hit that issue.
Double down on your strongest skill (sounds like Python) brush up on some of the changes (e.g. Python 3isms) and find a role where you can use it, all the new shiny stuff can come later.
They haven't come around to updating the page for a while (someone lost login info or something like that) but they have a new core and some projects that use the new SH4 equivalent core. https://www.coresemi.io/
They currently seem to be in a "release tarbal" model of open source but know they ought to be in an develop on master branch in public repo model.
> I wanted to move all those functions on a server in my LAN.
Not so "serverless" after all eh?