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I have a website with hundreds of thousands of monthly visitors running on a single Hetzner machine since >10 years (switched machines inside Hetzner a few times though).

My outage averages around 20 minutes per year, so an uptime of around 99.996%.

I have no idea where you see those "huge outages" coming from.


This has nothing to with the dates being in the future and only with convention and labeling the field correctly.

And in the table example you don't need the "where", because it's obviously in the restaurant's timezone.


If I want to book an appointment for April 12th 2027 at 2:00pm, then that's the time I want.

If my locale decides in 2026 to opt out of daylight savings time and not use it anymore -- it does not mean my appointment is now at 1:00pm instead. My appointment is still at April 12th 2027 at 2:00pm. But if I had saved it as a prediction of a UTC time in ISO 8601, then the system would think my appointment was now at 1:00pm.

This is why it has to do with dates being in the future. A past date-time can be converted to a UTC time represneted in ISO8601 that will not ever change (if it was converted properly).

I'm not sure where you got restaurants from -- you are the first person in this thread to mention restaurants? That is one use case for storing dates and times in the future, but certainly not the only one! There are of course some where the time zone is not "obvious". You realize there is software that's used for things other than restaurant orders and reservations, right? (Also I can imagine a restaurant that's a mobile food truck in an area near a timezone border...)

You speak very authoritatively and combatively about something I think you may not be on the same page about.


I did mention booking a table, because I used to work with restaurant booking.

It is eye-opening to have not one but two devs challenge me, both seasoned accounts so probably experienced developers.

But I've dealt with the real problems it causes and they clearly have never touched future dates or they'd have already hit these problems. Or maybe the US's timezones are more stable than the EU's? I think between the two startups they had something like 2 million uniques a year, with bookings in the 100,000s, so not exactly huge scale either. And only operated in like 4 countries. But we still hit them.


I am so glad that so many people in this thread confirm how bad the native date pickers are; i thought I was alone.

Just picking the year is so difficult already on both Android and iOS as well as desktop Chrome, so a custom widget is immediately 100x better.

Yes, in theory it would be best to display the native picker because in theory it has a great UX, but in practice the native browsers' implementations are mostly just really, really bad, for whatever reason.

That's what I really dislike about the linked article - it doesn't even check the native implementations for their quality but just argues as if they are great.


To be honest, I find it a bit hard to understand even from the video. The top part doesn't look like it has any container at all.


right? really badly explained visually (no matter how visible the tanks are in reality)


I must have missed the video apparently...


Technically yes, but it costs thousands per year for upkeep and again thousands plus 1-2 years of time to shut it down again.


I agree, I don't understand the hate in this thread.

And I think their paid hosting was actually really good, up until they switched their $20/month plan to a whatever-it-may-cost and we-send-you-10-cryptic-emails-about-your-usage-every-month plan. That's when they lost me, not because it got more expensive but because it became intransparent and unpredictable and annoying instead of carefree.


The problem of resource distribution is solved by money already.

If I can't pay for the robots, I am not getting them. And if I buy my robots and you only get a dishwasher then you can afford two nice vacations on top while I don't.

You don't lose anything if I get robots.


I feel this disregards of scarcity economics.

Let's say we have a finite amount of cheap water units between us. After exhausting those units, the price to acquire more goes up. Each our actions use up those units.

If restrictions on water use do not exist, you can quickly use up those units and, if you can easily afford more units, which makes sense as you have enough for robots, you are not concerned with using that cheap water up.

I can't even afford to "toil" with my dishwasher now.


I want to disagree about voters mostly following their peers. In my opinion the votes follow the values and from your example, you can predict a person's stance on gender idiology from their stance in immigration simply because both derive from the same underlying value (in this case probably how progressive vs conservative this person is). And generally of course people with the same values flock together.


> AfD are extreme because of what their positions are

Then show us their extreme positions! Their official party program is actually quite tame.


a cursory Google search reveals that they deny anthropogenic climate change, reject the idea of women in the workplace, and wish to deny marriage rights to homosexuals


They are conservative and have a few idiots and extremist people in their ranks yes, but that doesn't make the party as a whole extremist.

I never heard about their women-workspace-denial.

And being against marriage of homosexuals was the majority opinion from the beginning of time until around 10 years ago so you can hardly count that as extremist.


I read all the praise about Claude Code, tried it for a month and was very disappointed. For me it doesn't work any better than Cursor's sidebar and has worse UX on top. I wonder if I am doing something wrong because it just makes lots of stupid mistakes when coding for me, in two different code bases.


I'll suggest giving it another shot. It really is a game changer (I can't tell what you're doing wrong, but in a few people I've seen it has been about doing a psychological switch. I wrote about it a bit here - https://mnvr.in/beginners-mind, sharing in case it helps you see how you might approach it differently)


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