To substantiate your point, I was thinking about deforestation for farming in Indiana (where I live) and Ohio last week and learned that Indiana was 90% forest until taxes got in the way. It's crazy that something as silly as taxes can cause most of your forests to become farmland.
Yeah, it's crazy to insentivise deforestation. But people need to eat. And, depending on who you listen to, there is even some evidence that the rainforest may have been a cultivated environment itself, in the dim and distant past.
It does handle schema evolution wherever it can, including inferring the initial schema automatically based on the source and destination as well, which means there's no need for manual schema changes anywhere and it will keep them in sync wherever it can.
Would this work with Excel for the Mac as well or is primarily a Windows thing? Somehow, while good, I feel like Excel for Mac just isn't as good as Excel for Windows.
I wish that someone would make a Wine-style compatibility library that would run a local websocket server that communicates with a lightweight Add-In using the new cross-platform JS APIs for Excel, and translates VSTO/COM calls into IPC messages that are processed and responded to. Then you could bring all the old VSTO tools into the modern world, running in a separate process from Excel. This is... rather daunting to even think about. Arguably Apple should sponsor the project as a way to bring the world of finance towards using Macs!
The type of job and how you are wired makes a big difference in how you communicate. Like the OP, I'm someone who has always worked in startups (until the last couple months at a non-profit). I've always been on the product / leadership side and most recently cofounded a company where I had to wear all the hats for 7+ years. Most waking moments were focused on making the company successful and ensuring a stable income for my family (I have 4 kids under 17). My older kids are travel soccer players, life is busy and my communication with my wife has suffered for a long while. With limited time together a marriage still needs to move along... I appreciate the OP using all means of communication to improve the relationship. I too am a better writer than speaker so I will add some of his advice to my toolchest.
Author here - Sounds like you're in a similar situation (just 10 years ahead of me). I think this would work great for you, but you clearly have been doing something right to keep the marriage afloat for that long!
My wife and I want to leave a legacy for our kids and glorify God with our marriage. We've also had many first hand experiences of watching other marriages implode and cause harm to family members and children. It's always better to keep working at it, keep humble, and have fun enjoying life :)
https://woodlandsteward.squarespace.com/storage/past-issues/...
We are still alive. I wish we had the forests, but we have survived and the environment has adjusted.