Krav Maga
Knife defense drills
Multiple simulated attackers in a row
Inside fighting
Youtube
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This Krav Maga Master Blew Me Away!
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The Seven Voyages Of Steve
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Maciej Sinilo
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •The Seven Voyages Of Steve
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •toerror
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Sören Meyer-Eppler
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •context matters. In a professional setting with expected software lifespans of several years/decades and teams working on it, your point stands.
However, as a hobbyist learning the ropes, lowering the initial hurdle makes a lot of sense. At that stage motivation and momentum count more than the final result (which is measured in lessons learned instead of features delivered). So there is a good reason for low friction green field project support.
RethinkJeff
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Andrew Zonenberg
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Nikola Orsinov [Joseph Grimaldi]
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Rustt thoughh
Don't forget that Rust became a thing in the last 5-10 years!
My beloved
Salar Nosrati-Ershad
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Peach
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •gkrnours
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •snowyfox
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Sensitive content
64 Islands Aroha Cooperative
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Efexor Zolpidem
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Caleb James DeLisle
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •bovaz
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •Managers and such stay clueless.
Epic_Null
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •I partially wonder if this is because of who and what determines what's "trendy". When I drive the adoption of a tool, it's usually a small tool that fits in a small place in the workflow. (Massive benefits from it - the tool tends to do that one thing that was giving me problems really well. GitVersion is the most recent. Before that, it was an NPM package that makes it WAY easier to pull in unpublished NPM packages.)
Thing is... Those tools don't need marketing beyond minor SEO optimization. If you need them, you will probably find them or hear about them, and their users will tend to be quiet about them because those packages are not doing anything flashy. They are doing their jobs and taking care of a pain point in a workflow that doesn't highlight them.
Trendy development though, is a lot more about advertising. You need visibility to be trendy. Obvious impacts rather than subtle ones. Quick adoption rather than a slow adaption. It also tends to be the kind of thing that makes Managers excited rather than Developers.
And you also need these new technologies in flashy developments, not stable ones. Would you really notice if your bank made a backend refactor to adopt a technology that encouraged a smoother integration between their servers and databases? If your accounting software was modified to be more testable via automated means during the build stage, with the goal of more reliably finding and stopping bugs before release?
Probably not.
Bradley M. Kuhn
in reply to The Seven Voyages Of Steve • • •It has been longer. They literally taught me as undergraduate that Waterfall model would be replaced by Rapid Prototyping by the time I graduated in 1995.
And it was.
Seems often the only software available is someone's new prototype.
Cc: @kevin