Most of this is perfectly archetypical "hindsight says it's all about the little things", exactly what we expect our elders to say.
But consider no 100 year old dying in 1950 would bother impart:
> At the end of the day, sweaping the barn really is how all my children made it to age 5
> A rust-free butterchurn keeps those fingers attached, don't rest though there's a wall of glass
Good Timeless advice is a function of stagnation.
> Fighting complexity is a never-ending cause.
> Beware of Lock-In
These ones, though, I like. We should strive to understand problems in full generality, which may increase simplicity. But our current cloud-and-Docker-snakeoil trend is either epicycles, not ellipses, or lock-in, never neither.
But consider no 100 year old dying in 1950 would bother impart:
> At the end of the day, sweaping the barn really is how all my children made it to age 5
> A rust-free butterchurn keeps those fingers attached, don't rest though there's a wall of glass
Good Timeless advice is a function of stagnation.
> Fighting complexity is a never-ending cause.
> Beware of Lock-In
These ones, though, I like. We should strive to understand problems in full generality, which may increase simplicity. But our current cloud-and-Docker-snakeoil trend is either epicycles, not ellipses, or lock-in, never neither.