Forwarded from HN Best Comments
Re: Microservices are a big ball of mud
Don’t you find it weird that everybody else is either over or underengineering, but you, you engineer things exactly the right amount?
I bet when you’re driving, you also tend to notice that everyone else is either an idiot driving way too slow in the middle lane or a maniac speeding past you. Nobody else drives as well as you do.
It must be exhausting for these people to live in a world surrounded by strawmen, while they alone have achieved perfection. Which they will detail how they do in a later blogpost.
jameshart, 1 hour ago
Don’t you find it weird that everybody else is either over or underengineering, but you, you engineer things exactly the right amount?
I bet when you’re driving, you also tend to notice that everyone else is either an idiot driving way too slow in the middle lane or a maniac speeding past you. Nobody else drives as well as you do.
It must be exhausting for these people to live in a world surrounded by strawmen, while they alone have achieved perfection. Which they will detail how they do in a later blogpost.
jameshart, 1 hour ago
😁2
Forwarded from HN Best Comments
Re: Quitting the rat race
Bluntly, every person I know who's expressed these kinds of sentiments is guilty of the same mistake: externalizing their happiness.
They inevitably move, only to find the new place they're in sucks, just in different ways.
Or they find another job, but just discover more things they hate there.
Or they find a new partner, only to discover a new set of annoyances.
The same psychology leads people to think they'll be happy if they finally get that new car, or that new house, or that new TV.
All of it comes from the same place: assuming that happiness is something you can find by simply changing your circumstances.
Now, don't get me wrong, there are absolutely good reasons to want to change those circumstances! But it's critical to understand that oftentimes there is no one change of circumstances, one decision, one thing that will result in happiness.
I know it's a cliche, but I think I'm old enough now to confidently say that, yes: Happiness really does start from within.
BaseballPhysics, 8 hours ago
Bluntly, every person I know who's expressed these kinds of sentiments is guilty of the same mistake: externalizing their happiness.
They inevitably move, only to find the new place they're in sucks, just in different ways.
Or they find another job, but just discover more things they hate there.
Or they find a new partner, only to discover a new set of annoyances.
The same psychology leads people to think they'll be happy if they finally get that new car, or that new house, or that new TV.
All of it comes from the same place: assuming that happiness is something you can find by simply changing your circumstances.
Now, don't get me wrong, there are absolutely good reasons to want to change those circumstances! But it's critical to understand that oftentimes there is no one change of circumstances, one decision, one thing that will result in happiness.
I know it's a cliche, but I think I'm old enough now to confidently say that, yes: Happiness really does start from within.
BaseballPhysics, 8 hours ago
👍5