Sunday, February 27, 2022
War Dogs by Greg Bear
I normally don't like Greg Bear books because they are so "way way out" that I find it very difficult to assemble the universes he creates. But this one is relatively straightforward with a very-deep mystery that gets deeper. I had a theory about the relationship between the gurus, antags, and Mars structure in the story early on that was the right guess for the final reveal. 3/5 Stars. I may read the next one.
Monday, February 21, 2022
Mitch joins Lessen as VP Engineering
I am extremely grateful and happy to announce I have joined Lessen as VP Engineering. I am eager to learn, grow, and help revolutionize property management. Thank you Chris Bee, Ashley White, and everyone on the Lessen team with whom I have connected.
I am hiring. #hiring
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Momo von Michael Ende
Ein wunderbares Märchen über ein junges Mädchen, das die Superkraft hat, anderen aufmerksam zuhören zu können, und das den Wert von Zeit mit anderen und Geduld verstehen kann. Sie schließt starke Freundschaften mit Menschen. Mit ihrer Freundin Kassiopeia und der Hilfe von Herrn "Sekundus Minutus Hora" nimmt sie es mit den "Grauen Männern" – den Meistern der Effizienz – auf, die allen die wertvolle zwischenmenschliche Zeit gestohlen haben. Spass, 4/5 Sterne.
Labels:
deutsch
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
shade California's aqueducts with solar power
According to this interesting pilot and proposal, the drought-stricken state could save 63 billion gallons of water from evaporation by adding some shade. So why not generate 13 Gigawatts of power at the same time? It's a win-win-win and a great step towards renewable energy.
Labels:
popsci
Monday, February 14, 2022
The Freeze-Frame Revolution
I am a huge fan of Peter Watts' "Firefall" series of books (Blindsight and Echopraxia). I don't like the author's "Rifters" stories nearly as much, despite the author's PhD in the area. I discovered in my local library that Watts had written another book, Freeze-Frame Revolution in 2018 and added it to my stack. The book is very thrilling, similar to Poul Anderson's Tao Zero. The characters and plot are similar to the Firefall series. 5/5 Stars. Now I need to go get the online story fragments and short stories in the Eriophora Sunflower cycle.
There is no attack surface like NO attack surface
Ben Hughes has a funny and insightful blog post about the endless recapitulation of DevSecOps concepts over the last 25 years. He mentions one of my deep-held beliefs that simplicity and component removal instead of complexity and constant addition are more secure.
The hotness du jour is Distroless (congratulations, you've reinvented using chroot from 1997), where the goal is to have no userland you don't need in the image. For compiled applications like Go, Rust and the likes this is easy as they do/can spit out static binaries so you don't have to worry about libraries (as a whole). They can contain as little asca-certificates
,/etc/passwd
,/tmp
, andtzdata
!% docker inspect gcr.io/distroless/static-debian11 | jq '.[0].Size' | numfmt --to iec --format "%.2f"
2.26M
A relatively small 2.26 megabyte container has a much smaller attack surface than the huge containers we normally deploy. This concept is similar to unikernels and immutable infrastructure for virtual machines. Unikernels on VMs are more secure and better isolated from their parent and other tenants. However VMs are no longer en vogue. Kubernetes is the answer; what is your problem?
Ben goes on to rant about all the useless poop we cram into our docker images that bloat their size, slow us down in all of our processes & CI/CD pipelines, and contain dozens of security vulnerabilities. As Elon keeps saying whenever he talks about engineering: Try very hard to remove objects, components, and features you don't need.
Labels:
devops
Sunday, February 13, 2022
Friday, February 11, 2022
Losing the Nobel Prize by Brian Keating
I saw Dr. Keating's Lex interview and decided to get the book. The book is gripping and fantastic. Dr. Keating is a great "popular science" author, bringing the difficult and complex topics of physics and cosmology accurately and simply into layman's terms. The drama and analysis of the Nobel Prize and the new privately funded larger collaborations opposed to the insane competition in science are very-well presented. 5/5 Stars, very highly recommended.
Labels:
popsci
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
Sunday, February 6, 2022
Saturday, February 5, 2022
Schilf von Juli Zeh
Ich habe dieses Buch geliebt. Jedes Kapitel ist straff, spannend, Hitchcock-artig. Zehs Stil ist fließend, aber auch elegant sparsam. Sie spielt den Roman im Schwarzwald und ihr beschreibendes Schreiben gibt dem Roman ein Gefühl für die Gegend, ihre saubere, frische Luft und unberührten Gebäude. Die Charaktere sind fantastisch. Die Art und Weise, wie die Physik und die Definition von Zeit in die Handlung eingewoben werden, ist wunderbar. Jetzt muss ich mehr von ihren Büchern finden. 5/5 Sterne.
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Mature vs Immature Developers
My friend recently blogged about an article he came across and generalized that non-developers also display these abstract signs of maturity or immaturity. I could not agree more.
Labels:
biz
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