Message from @spaceplacenta

Discord ID: 285113793103527936


2017-02-25 17:36:22 UTC  

quote: "While REST stands for Representational State Transfer, which is an architectural style for networked hypermedia applications, it is primarily used to build Web services that are lightweight, maintainable, and scalable. A service based on REST is called a RESTful service."

2017-02-25 17:36:49 UTC  

I also do this professionally, so I'm exposed to a different set of topics probably

2017-02-25 17:38:39 UTC  

"so a microservice is something like a library in the context of distributed replicated systems" Do people boilerplate with microservices?

2017-02-25 17:39:59 UTC  

I just lkooked up what boilerplating really means.

2017-02-25 17:40:02 UTC  

I meant it in a slightly metaphorical way. It's a service that other distributed services use, that is self-contained and usually light-weight

2017-02-25 17:40:03 UTC  

I was wrong about that, too

2017-02-25 17:40:28 UTC  

A guy I talked to used it as a black box you send things in to, and it send ssomething out, but you don't know how exactly it does it

2017-02-25 17:40:31 UTC  

you just know what its function is

2017-02-25 17:41:01 UTC  

sure, that's correct. Usually this principle is called "encapsulation"

2017-02-25 17:41:23 UTC  

Understanding OO concepts would be helpful towards understanding REST

2017-02-25 17:41:26 UTC  

and a microservice (and a library) are indeed expected to encapsulate 😃

2017-02-25 17:42:30 UTC  

@redpillavatar hm, I'd say that one might be more comfortable with REST coming from a (purely or otherwise) functional background

2017-02-25 17:42:32 UTC  

I only do OO programming. Ravioli code

2017-02-25 17:42:54 UTC  

basically REST says "use HTTP verbs for actions, and make your service a pure function of the request"

2017-02-25 17:43:12 UTC  

in my limited understanding, anyway

2017-02-25 17:43:27 UTC  

there's a whole PhD thesis on REST, so presumably there's a little more to it

2017-02-25 17:43:30 UTC  

😄

2017-02-25 17:47:01 UTC  
2017-02-25 17:49:21 UTC  

right, that's the one I meant. I at least skimmed a couple of years ago.

2017-02-25 18:16:24 UTC  

Is everyone here in IT or what

2017-02-25 18:20:25 UTC  

Surprised the IT sector isn't 100% Indian by now

2017-02-25 18:21:03 UTC  

There were a bunch of Indians at my last jerb, all IT. What's funny is that they're pee-shy

2017-02-25 18:21:33 UTC  

If you stand at the urinal next to them

2017-02-25 18:21:42 UTC  

They will wait for you to leave first

2017-02-25 18:21:45 UTC  

Before peeing

2017-02-25 18:21:50 UTC  

also lol

2017-02-25 18:28:49 UTC  

Indians made a version of C++ which had Indian words instead of English in the 1980's

2017-02-25 18:28:52 UTC  

or maybe 1990's

2017-02-25 18:29:25 UTC  

@spaceplacenta H1B and L1B visa exploitation is on the chopping block, so that trend will likely reverse itself.

2017-02-25 18:29:45 UTC  

Yeah. I was just thinking about that

2017-02-25 18:41:24 UTC  

@HeimatFreiheitTradition AGREED ON INDIA OUTSOURCING

2017-02-25 18:41:31 UTC  

COSTS ARE LOWER UNTIL YOU ADD UP SECONDARY COSTS

2017-02-25 18:41:38 UTC  

BUT THEN AGAIN, GLOBALISM IS DEAD

2017-02-25 18:41:42 UTC  

SORRY FOR FLAKY PRESENCE

2017-02-25 18:41:47 UTC  

AM EDITING PODCAST AND LINKS LIST

2017-02-25 18:41:50 UTC  

EVIL NEVER RESTS

2017-02-25 18:48:38 UTC  

Is globalism not just an effect of capitalist snowballing?

2017-02-25 18:48:41 UTC  

Genuine question

2017-02-25 18:48:50 UTC  

Capitalism still lives, so why will globalism die?

2017-02-25 18:53:19 UTC  

Globalism in certain cases is very capitalist. However, it may be right to think about it as the battle between the primary beneficiaries of capitalism, vs national interests. And, in certain cases, exploitation of labor laws here in the US.