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Seen Phish many times.

Besides the band’s success in carving their own niche, I’m equally surprised by the intricacy of the economy that enables Phish and other traveling shows to be successful.

There are many specialists required to make it happen. Roadies who travel with the artists. Arenas (with their often billionaire owners). Security and hospitality staff. Vendors in the arenas selling food, drinks, and merch. Vendors outside the shows selling bootleg merch, street food, alcohol, and other illicit goods in the parking lots.

There’s a lot happening every night to make the whole thing as fun as it is.


Thanks for your service! I’ve spent many hours enjoying it.


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Happy to see this silliness return.


GitLab team member here. This is a typo. Will be fixed shortly. Thanks.


Agreed. You can’t push back the ocean.


Tell that to The Netherlands.


They have been "at war" with water for centuries now. Several floods have occurred, the last major flood was in the 1950's, IIRC. For the most part they have managed to keep the water out, but I wouldn't consider their battle fully settled yet.


I'm a GitLab team member. Here are a few resources I would recommend:

1. GitLab University is our training portal and has plenty of CI/CD content and courses - https://university.gitlab.com/pages/ci-cd-content

2. GitLab's docs provide tutorials for many topics and include written and video content for different types of learners. You may want to start with the topics marked "Good for beginners" - https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/tutorials/build_application.html


:waves:


It's a curious division between "old internet" and "new internet" (those on the *chans may have parallel but slightly different terminology for this dichotomy) to see people use BBS-style vs IRC-style emotive expressions.


In every presentation I saw at re:Invent that mentioned AI, RAG was also mentioned.

It seems to me that with AI, as models and products achieve parity, the amount of data that is accessible to a provider will be the key differentiator in quality of responses. Those who can gain access to the most customer data will be best-positioned to win the AI market.


Because AWS trying to upsell Bedrock and Opensearch instances.


GitLab team member here.

One way to approach this would be using Epics [0], which can live at the group-level. Child epics and/or issues can then be used for more finely tuned requirements.

0 - https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/group/epics/index.html


I should point out that multi-level epics are only available at Gitlab's $99 per user per month level. We wanted to use them, but it's not worth that much. Jira is a lot more flexible and cost effective in this regard.


99 per user per month is crazy expensive IMHO.


And it's not just for developers who might be using the expensive stuff (git, storage, CI minutes). Also for members of the org who only use tickets.


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