Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | desktopninja's comments login

"AInetes is coming"


The analogy I came up with when I first learned about kubernetes in its early days was: "This is like a Bally's Total Fitness gym membership. Once signed up, you're locked in."

Companies are like bodybuilders:

- Many will try to look like Arnold Schwarzenegger (Mr. Universe), but few will succeed. - A significant number of others will focus on developing certain muscle groups more than others. The resulting appearance will look disproportionate or deformed. - The majority will just limp along, because we're paying for the membership and can't easily get out.

The key point is that it takes incredible discipline, knowledge, and resources (including money) to achieve the "nirvana" state, and then maintain it. And as a company ages, it will require even more effort to keep up that level of fitness and performance.

Just like a bodybuilder, achieving and sustaining peak condition is extremely challenging, even for the most dedicated and well-resourced companies. Most will fall short of the ideal, resulting in an unbalanced or suboptimal outcome.

Consulting companies are the real winners here. Kubernetes is their cash cow, as they can provide the expertise to help companies (try) achieve and maintain their "bodybuilder" status.

After seeing this comic, my v2 analogy especially after seeing the motorcycle slides is this:

If I ( === company) get a Yamaha Tenere 700 I'll be just like Pol Tarres!

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDxBGc9TD4c - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PngVqi5wT8 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DgzzjiFn7g

Guessing the individual riding the motorcycle is the IT director ... to me this depiction screams "motorcycle squid".

For the record, I am not against using Kubernetes, but I highly question the decisions made to use Kubernetes. Majority of the time I get the sense someone "drank the koolaid" vs a techincal reason. The analogy is meant to highlight the significant challenges, resources and discipline required to truly master and maintain such a complex system.


Learnt from my grandmother to eat plenty bananas before bedtime. It helped with my asthma and swear too that it did wonders for my sleep.

Usually had it with a hot curry at dinner time or dessert (sliced bananas, cubed apples and evaparoted milk.)


I knew a guy that would eat a banana per beer. He would portion the bananas out beforehand, so we could tell he was serious when he showed up to a stag-do with two bunches!


Oh man that’s a lot of bloat! Beer + sugar


Anecdotally, I always had much better sleep and mornings every time I remembered to eat a banana (or two!) before going to bed after a night of heavy drinking...


That is so many bananas


i don't drink anymore but if offered i'd down without hesitation a wells banana bread beer or banana beer. tasty stuff


Bananas aren't high in potassium. That's a myth. A banana has 450mg and a potato has 650mg.


Bananas have a decent amount of potassium per serving. A lot more than many foods. That’s not a myth.

The only myth is that bananas are a unique source of potassium. A lot of foods have similar or more amounts of potassium per serving or by weight.


Zuckerberg isn't rich. That's a myth. He had $200B and Elon has $450B.


Eloquent truth pointer right there! ;)


Come to think of it, you’re right. It was when he showed up with a big ol’ bag full of potatoes that we knew it was gonna be a serious party.


Can one simply stick to vodka, skip the potatoes, and reap all the benefits?


Fair enough, but I still prefer the banana. Just a little bit tastier than a raw potato.


Adding to that bananas are high in sugar. 12 to 15 grams each


Potatoes have almost double the glycemic index of a banana, meaning that the impact on metabolism and insulin production is greater and faster.


True, but just because fructose has a low GI doesn't make it good for you.


If it helps you sleep, a banana isn’t going to kill you. If it doesn’t help you sleep, then don’t eat a banana, that’s also okay.


Afaik if you cool the potatoes down to get resistant starch, the GI should be similar to a banana


Two bananas to a potato (I assume we’re talking something like a russet, not a little red potato?) sounds generous to the potato, if we’re talking volume equivalence.

A potato’s a meal. A banana’s a lightish snack.


Per 100g ground beef is 300+mg of potassium

No carbs, no sugars, no fiber induced bloating, could easily get more than 100g into a meal

My understanding is potassium also competes with salt in the body


I've only ever been able to finish raw banana. I've tried raw potato but it was almost gag worthy.


The gagging reminds me, there aren’t many things that beat the smell of a rotting potato.


Rotting human flesh is pretty bad. Thats the only thing I can think of worse.


How much does that potato weigh? The size of potatoes varies quite a bit


Sadly I don’t think French fries have the same effect.


Potassium is a chemical element, frying it won't change the potassium level.


you can most definitely change the levels of components in a fried food.

the oil gets 'dirty' from extended use in frying. Why is it dirty? It's not dirt, and it's not oil breakdown (in most cases).

The oil is drawing components from the food into itself.

Forget the frying for a second; most fries are parboiled or blanched -- this also leeches material away from the vegetable, this time it leaves with the water used for blanching.

A french fry is delicious, but it's different than a potato -- even if it's made from one.


I don't know about the case of potassium specifically, but in general I thought that the bioavailability of elements can vary with different types of cooking?


Why would something being an element mean that heating it as part of a food wouldn’t act as a catalyst for some chemical interaction?


There would still be potassium in there, unless it’s pulled out by the frying oil.

Elements can’t get lost in a chemical reaction. You can only change the molecule they’re part of, so it might not be processable by the human body, but the potassium isn’t going to disappear.


It's not going to dissappear, but it could dissolve into the cooking oil, leaving less in the finished product. This happens with boiling as well.

The fact that the element cannot physically vanish into thin air is not really relevant here


It is relevant because I replied to this:

> Why would something being an element mean that heating it as part of a food wouldn’t act as a catalyst for some chemical interaction?

It sounds like the person thinks that chemical reactions can make elements change/disappear, which is not the case. And I specifically mentioned the Oil removing the potassium as an option.


I guess that depends how hot you fry it.


How hot would it need to be do fission a stable isotope of Potassium?


A temperature so hot that the atoms of the potato would violently collide into each other, probably at least tens of millions of degrees and you would need something to confine the potato plasma!


> confine the potato plasma

And once that's done, The Sims has almost loaded.


Maybe it’s fusion and potassium content increases?


Or you fuse potassium atoms into something heavier.


What it won't help with is mosquitos. They LOVE banana-flavored people.

Learned it from first hand experience.


I believe this too! My brother is not a fan bananas and barely registers mosquito bites. Me on the other hand am pursued mercilessly. Could also be we have different blood types but the immediate evidence we've seen is bananas :)


The trick is to offer bananas to everyone and refrain from eating. Then the mosquitos will prefer the other people and leave you for later.


What do you get out of evaporated milk that you can't get from milk?


Its either sweeter or creamier. I always get evaporated and condensed mixed up.


I’ve mixed them up too and that was the worst Mac and Cheese I ever made!


I once had mac and cheese where the usually-excellent cook mixed up the cheese sauce with the dessert custard.

The surprising bit is how far you can get into a meal that looks right before you realise it really is not.


Condensed milk is evaporated milk + added sugar.

I sometimes buy evaporated because it is a big time-saver, but never sweetened condensed because it's quick and easy to add sugar myself, and leaves me in control of how much relative to the other ingredients.

Both are thicker, creamier, and even sweeter than milk - because even without the added sugar the natural sweetness of the milk is concentrated by the reduction, removing all that water.


Good to know, thanks.


tbh, really never look into it but according to my taste buds it pairs better than regular milk.


...plenty? That's at least more than 2 for me. Can you eat 3+ bananas in one sitting? Are we talking really small, average or big bananas?


AI is a cancer ... What Would Steve Ballmer say? Mmm


Mmm. Amazon lays off thousands of workers but drops 4Bil$ into another company. Mmm.


cut the fat, use the money to get the steak :)


I have not worked with it but for a while now, considering its core functionality of database+forms+cases, have harbored the idea of repurposing it and using it to modernize areas in the healthcare industry. E.g. practice management


SysAdmin. Even AI needs a hero.


Can we bring back sysadmin as a job title instead of all these fancy newfangled ancronyms! Signed, greybeard sysadmin pretending to be newfangled.


Have long stood by this belief and still do but modern IT calls it legacy and antiquated. Oh how we've lost The Plot.


The modern attitude is discard everything "old", not immediately understood, and abandon standardization and simplicity.


I agree. I'd go further and say that the modern attitude is to discard everything "old", regardless of whether it is understood or not.


Eh, I don’t think that’s true. I think you’ve just had bad experiences, and that that can definitely be true in pockets.

For example, I am exceptionally happy that we have standardized on OpenAPI documentation and/or the self-documenting nature of GraphQL (where used) rather than WSDLs and the other ancient nonsense.

I’m also glad we’ve mostly progressed from SAML to OAuth2/OIDC/JWT. Sure, SAML still exists but it’s definitely on its way out, once the enterprises of yesteryear eventually switch.

I don’t know if you’ve ever built a SAML application and/or IdP, but it’s awful.

Sometimes “old” is just worse.


You're cherry-picking technologies. I'm talking about people.

Yes, I have. Krb5, LDAP, OAuth2, CAS, and SAML 1 & 2. XML sucks but sometimes you have to pee with bits you have rather than remake the entire world all at once with a utopian panacea.


Oh, of course - if you have no other options you go with what you have.

But if you have other options, I think too many people are also stuck in “I know what I know and I know it will work” and will happily kludge along while something else is sitting right next to them, better for the job.

Neither extreme works.


I can only hope this is cyclical, like most other things. Eventually organizations will reach a breaking point and realize if they want reliability, stability, and longevity, they need to slow down and do things the right way. At least I hope that’s the case. It doesn’t seem like the current pace can or should be maintained. It produces so much throw away junk.


Huge fan of Eclipse Orion IDE. This looks identical. Is it the same thing different name or was Orion the project code name?


Eclipse Orion was abandoned. Theia is based on VSCode not Orion.


According to these links, it's not a fork. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40896408


I wonder how many engineers use AWS's Powershell cmdlets?

They are incredibly well built and feel first class/more polished than a lot of AWS tools.


Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: