CEO/Principal Consultant at INNOQ, he/him, software architect, RESTafarian, conference tourist. Works at innoq.com. Fediverse: @stilkov@innoq.social

Germany
Joined April 2007
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Replying to @ToxoplasmatikoG
Israel/Palestine seems to be much less clear to me, with good and bad actors and victims on both sides. Admittedly also much easier to support a democratic government than a regime such as the one in Kazakhstan.
We seem to agree stopping him as early as possible seems to be preferable. Ukraine has put up a hell of a fight so far and made it much harder for Putin than he ever imagined. The more of that, the better.
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This is the approach we have taken in a number of projects and it works very well
Web components are powerful, but so is semantic HTML. To get the best of both worlds, try wrapping and enhancing existing elements with web components. I wrote about this, and a new elastic-textarea component for the @CloudFour blog. cloudfour.com/thinks/web-com…
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As a German, I feel ashamed about the half-assed support my government shows Ukraine. I strongly support giving every kind of aid (short of actually entering the war) to stop the Russian aggression
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Replying to @jogehrs
Excellent talk, thanks for sharing. I agree with most of it, but I don’t accept some of the premises (e.g. most people who hate SPAs and prefer MPAs have nothing against JS)
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Maybe we should talk
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Sehr schöner Intro-Artikel zum Thema Data Mesh von meinem Kollegen @jochen_christ: heise.de/hintergrund/Data-Me…
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Another fantastic post
This part details why I didn’t try fitting a SPA into my 20kB demo: dev.to/tigt/routing-im-not-s…
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Daran ändert sich aber nichts, wenn so ein Hinweis nicht angezeigt wird
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Great explanation of Twitter’s poison pill
We pushed each other so hard for years for this one newsletter. And we f[******] blitzed it boys. bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
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Fascinating read, but for me it confirms my belief that the risk is not in AI actually becoming intelligent, but rather us humans mistaking its faking skills for understanding
"Perhaps the game of predict-the-next-word is what children unconsciously play when they are acquiring language themselves." A brilliant piece by @stevenbjohnson. nyti.ms/37SdY3M
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Replying to @dret @rotnroll666
I always considered it way too abstract and explicitly disliked the idea of schema validation adding information to it. Might have been very different if XML, namespaces and schema had all been designed at the same time, forming a consistent whole
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Having to use XSD to support backwards-compatible services, or trying to build modular components, or dealing with namespace names in attribute values, it all sucked
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The horrible code generation approach led people to believe concepts applicable to local method calls could be transferred to network programming, and thus gave the world the horror that was WSDL
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Replying to @rotnroll666
XSD relies on namespaces, which were added to XML too late, it mixes record-style structure definition into a markup language universe, and it led to the abominable infoset concept. I much preferred RNG or Schematron.
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EMMA wusste ich, aber ZEIT auch?
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I always knew you were a puritan by heart, Eberhard
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Replying to @Carnage4Life
The main reason I’m not on FB
Replying to @GerritBeine
Das ist alles vielleicht nicht toll, aber unendlich viel besser als das absolut unerträgliche Discovery
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Replying to @pinskinator @danluu
That’s a valid point, but not at all the one you made originally :)
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