Developer Educator @ Aiven | Previously Stripe, CNCF, commercetools.
nerd :D
@celeste_horgan on Twitter
Developer Educator @ Aiven | Previously Stripe, CNCF, commercetools.
nerd :D
@celeste_horgan on Twitter
Oooh, a bit of 🌶️ drama in #opentelemetry land with a bit of an interesting update on the PR which was abruptly closed.
Seems the developer was “asked” by Datadog to kill the pull request on the DD receiver.
https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib/pull/5836#issuecomment-1404724926
Description: Added ability to receive DD APM Traces Testing: Tested in real world by adding plugin and sending DDAPM traces through Documentation: https://github.com/boostchicken/opentelemetry-co...
As a maintainer of OpenSource libraries and packages, there is something that kept feeling off in the whole Software Supply Chain discourse. I think this comes down to something simple.
I am not a Supplier.
You can read more explanation there https://www.softwaremaxims.com/blog/not-a-supplier
For the past few years, we have seen a lot of discussions around the concept of the Software Supply Chain. These discussions started around the time of LeftPad and escalated with multiple incidents in the past few years. The problem of all the work in this domain is that it forgets a fundamental point.
2023 is going to be the year of websites—specifically personal websites—and I’m here for it.
It seems like the momentum for people to hyper-focus (or re-focus) on their personal home on the World Wide Web has come from the rapid decline in Twitter, since Elon Musk has taken it upon himself to destroy it.
Sure, it’s mainly created a surge in people creating Mastodon accounts, but people are also realising—including me—that betting
https://andy-bell.co.uk/2023-the-year-of-websites/