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I love it! I think I might pitch this as something to do with coworkers under the guise of learning more about CI tools.

We already use Jenkins, but the SRE team manages it, so us programmers don't get to play with it too much. This could be a great excuse for tinkering with the more integrated offerings from Github/Bitbucket/Gitlab.


My mistake. It appears that Github still doesn't have any first-party CI offering. I must have confused it with the other two.


I'm guessing it stands for "street cred zero" as in having zero street credibility.

Wiktionary defines "street cred" as:

> Credibility among young, hip urban dwellers; particularly important in the hip-hop and rap scenes.

Google defines it somewhat more tersely as:

> acceptability among young black urban residents

Given that the user name says the user has no street cred, it's ironic that people would assume the user is "urban".


> Given that the user name says the user has no street cred, it's ironic that people would assume the user is "urban".

I don't think so. If they weren't “urban” it wouldn't be relevant at all—no streets.


Amen! But I know what my company would say. "Training devs and SRE on a new language is too expensive. And there are too few Rust devs in the job market, and the ones there are are too expensive to hire."


On the other hand, I have experienced a situation where a fairly young group experienced tech burnout from having to learn too much at once. It's a really tricky balance. I was definitely on the side of "We're programmers! Learning programming languages is like drinking water for us" originally, but now I step back a bit every time we think of introducing new tech. Still, spiking a solution in a couple of different languages seems awesome and I can think of a few projects I've worked on that would definitely have benefited from that.


Cloudflare still seems to operate pretty similar to a startup despite now being huge. These days, it seems like a lot more companies that begin as startups are preserving more of that experimental, innovative culture to their later stages. Y Combinator, and others, definitely deserve credit for positively influencing the industry.


A few thoughts:

1. Cloudflare has an unusual structure in that we have a three engineering groups: the core engineering group that builds things that the product management team specify, a totally separate disruption group that works on riskier bets, and a crypto research group.

2. I strongly believe that letting people work in languages they love has a huge advantage. Engineers want to learn new skills (and those that don't we don't want to hire) and so letting them do that means they are happier and do better work.

3. Small teams do more than large ones. The teams that work on Cloudflare products are very small and agile.


The person in the article started at 16 and is now 19.


Even so, it's an amazingly good income for a teenager. Live with your parents, and you're a millionaire before you're 20. Live anywhere outside Silicon Valley, and it's still a fantastic income for anyone.


I know I'm completely missing the point, but how does knowing which plane is upsetting your cat help with the situation? Are you going to report them to the FAA or something?

P.S. Coming up with examples for things in computer science that aren't absurd is hard. I had to think of an example when I was explaining junction tables for many-to-many relationships to someone the other day. After a minute or so of thinking, I just fell back on that old standard of books and authors.


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