I'm a listener since day #1 / the first Show HN five years ago. This is my favourite fiction podcast, by far. What started as "Black Mirror if it were a podcast" has grown to even more. I can't recommend this enough, the episodes are entertaining and almost every time thoughtful / thought provoking.
What hendi is too modest to mention is that his generous praise is only matched by his generous financial support for the show. I can only humbly thank you for both.
We use htmx (mostly via our django-livecomponents) on our production website, for several public facing features. We've initially replaced numerous small things that were built with Alpine before, and once we've gained confidence we rewrote our whole messaging app from reason/react app.
Fun thing, customers find the new version (htmx/django-livecomponents) to be more responsive than the old version (react+REST). New version is less lines of code and easier to hack on die to fewer context switching.
We've build (and open-sourced) our own livecomponents[1] for Django and based it on htmx. That way we got a ton of client side functionality for free and didn't have to reinvent the wheel. Just this week we've retired our old react based webapp and replaced it with our Django livecomponents. htmx is awesome!
I've switched to Kagi a year ago and haven't looked back. I've tried Bing and DDG before and went back to Google immediately. Not so with Kagi, since switching over to it I've googled less than a handful of times. Seriously, try it.
I did try Kagi, IMHO cost limit by no of searches did not meet my needs and felt over priced. DDG and perplexity meets my needs and gives my money worth
Well if it’s for learning, you can rent vms from hosting providers. That’s a fairly inexpensive way to learn about BGP with a global “toy” CDN.
I have a small ipv6 subnet I purchased for just this purpose. It was interesting setting everything up in multiple locations and seeing traffic routing around as I turned machines on and off.
I also set up my machines as a reverse proxy of a sort, a small fake CDN, and experimented with caching at different locations and moving content around.
I would have gotten a bit more serious about it, but I’m still on the waiting list for an ipv4 subnet after 2 years. And pretty sure it would be too expensive now. Would have to check though.