The Fulfilled Promise of Serverless
I respectfully disagree with the arguments made on Last Week in AWS against Serverless.Regarding portability issues
The problem described is down to architecture. Do you need to add logic that handles the API Gateway? Yes. Does it have to be an integral part of your Lambda functions? No. In the majority of Serverless stacks that I've seen, the handling of the API Gateway event (think auth, middleware, different content types, etc.) is done in a separate package and can be relatively easily re-implemented for another Cloud provider. I do accept the premise of AWS Step Functions being the exception to this rule, but I don't believe they are absolutely necessary (nor do they feel productive to work with). Most Step Functions structure can be replaced by either a Queue or Messaging system, depending on the requirements.Regarding the perceived value fallacy
Essentially the argument is about the limited impact savings Serverless could bring to the table compared to the overall budget. One critical thing isn't taken into account - The inevitable DevOps department. I have seen plenty of early stage startup with 5-10 engineers and zero DevOps. Nearly in every one of those cases they were able to do that by going either fully managed (e.g. Vercel, Auth0) or fully Serverless. Those saved salaries count for much more than the net savings on the infrastructure budget.Regarding the difficulty of collaboration compared to WordPress
It is unclear in your argument whether those collaborators were writers or engineers, but I'm assuming writers. I do agree that it is much easier to write articles using WordPress than your home-made lean Serverless solution. This however completely misses the point. It is not WordPress the writers are missing, it is the WYSIWYG editor (In WordPress's case - Gutenberg). There are plenty of full-featured Markdown editors that can directly save to GitHub. A website generator such as Hugo could easily connect those repositories with your website and presto! Writers are happy again.Posted in TechnologyDropbox ignore folders like node_modules
Great Dropbox tip:
If you have code on Dropbox, and are annoyed by node_modules sync ups (or just want to avoid syncing certain folders), there's a new way to solve your endless sync problems!
Dropbox has introduced a new attribute you could add to your files/folder to make sure they're ignored!
On Linux, you could simply create the following alias:Then simply use your new dignore command like so:alias dignore="attr -s com.dropbox.ignored -V 1"
dignore path_to_file_or_folder
Important: make sure no active sync is running for the folder, as it could cause "Ignored Item Conflict"
More info on Dropbox IgnoreDropbox Ignore VS Exclude
Dropbox Ignore - when you don't want Dropbox to upload a certain file/folder to the Dropbox Cloud. Dropbox Exclude - when you don't want Dropbox to download a certain file/folder to your local machine.
That's pretty much it!Posted in TechnologyPackaging NodeJS scripts into a Binary
Hey Node devs, jealous of Go devs for being able to create single binaries without any dependencies?
Now you can do it too! With pkg - a binary compiler for NodeJS!pkg - from NodeJS to binary
I recently developed a NodeJS script that automatically consumes SQS messages when an EC2 instance is initiated.
My most major issue has been the dependencies - NodeJS installation was often slow, and would sometimes fail or timeout.
On top of that, I had to also install the AWS SDK in order to get the SQS messages.
The entire thing was too much of a delay for my User Data script to handle.
Side Note: User Data is a script that executes when an EC2 instance is initialized. Very useful for pulling Docker images or running init scripts.
After an evening of debugging, I started thinking - this would be a whole lot easier with Go, as I would just have a single binary file and zero dependencies to install.
The issue was that converting my entire script to Go would've required much more time, and would likely create new issues (as AWS SDK varies between the languages, not to mention I'm much more experienced with NodeJS compared to Go).
I then thought that within the infinite universe of NPM there must be a tool that packages binaries out of NodeJS scripts, or at least somehow bundles the NodeJS runtime together with my script.pkg to the rescue!
pkg allows you to bundle your NodeJS scripts into a single binary.
No more dependencies, no more node_modules/, package.json, npm install...
Simply download the single executable and... well... Execute!
I have successfully tested the following with pkg:- NodeJS environment (obviously) - includes Node8, Node6, and Node4 (9 is not supported yet)
- Operating System - includes linux, mac, and windows
- NPM Libraries (aws-sdk in my case) - works without any configuration
- Environment Variables - works without any configuration
- Spawning Child Processes - works without any configuration
- Async/Await - works without any configuration
Install pkg
Tip: it also works if you install it locally, you would simply have to run:npm install -g pkg
instead of just pkg./node_modules/.bin/pkg
Run pkg
The command above simply bundles server.js into a linux binary named server-linuxpkg --targets node8-linux server.js -o server-linux
Until next time!Posted in Technology5 super useful Google Chrome tricks
I have been using Chrome for many years now, mostly not really thinking of it as a browser but rather just a thin layer between me and the WWW.
Today I realized something pretty interesting - you can select multiple tabs by holding down the CTRL key and clicking with your mouse!
The selected tabs can be moved to another window, or moved around other existing tabs. Until now I have been moving them one-by-one like some animal!
I decided to make a list of 5 lesser known Chrome tricks (ok except CTRL + SHIFT + T).Create App shortcuts
Apparently there's a mode on Chrome called "App mode", which is just a very light window without any extra toolbars, designed to only display a web-app's content. On Menu -> Tools / More tools -> Create application shortcuts... / Create shortcut... you will find an option to create shortcuts for such web-apps. Now on Windows the icon will show up on your Desktop, and on Linux it'll be under your main application menu -> Chrome Apps (not sure about Mac, likely to be either or).
In case you want to use the command line, there's an options for that too:google-chrome --app=www.google.com
Play the Dinosaur T-Rex game, even when you're online!
By going to chrome://dino/ you can play the T-Rex Game. No longer do you have to wait for your provider to have a technical issue to enjoy this game :)Understand how Omnibox works
By going to chrome://omnibox/ , you can see exactly the results that Omnibox generates and how they were arrived at. This is super cool when Omnibox sometimes gives you odd results, like when you're typing "Cale" (for Google Calendar) and it gives you a Google search for "Cale" instead of "calendar.google.com".Select multiple tabs
As mentioned before you can use CTRL + click to select multiple tabs on Chrome. Multi-tabs selection gives you a quick way to send them to another window, or move them between your existing tabs.
Bonus tip: You can select entire ranges of tabs with SHIFT + click, just like in a file browser!Reopen closed tab
By now I imagine most of you know about CTRL + SHIFT + T. Just in case some of you don't, it's a magical combination of keys that lets you reopen a tab you just accidentally closed.
It's a lifesaver, and I admit to use it at least once a day.Posted in Technology3 Startups from Zurich, London and San-Francisco compared
This is a story of 3 startups, starting in 3 different ecosystems, with similar solutions for Invoice Financing.
Here we will be looking into their funding rounds to learn about the differences between the startup ecosystems of Zurich, London, and San Francisco.
First of all:What's Invoice Financing?
Scenario: You're a web developer, and you get paid 30 days after the invoice was sent. Until then, you need to pay your rent/business expenses, what do you do? A bank loan is the traditional solution (but it takes time). Invoice financing is a modern solution to this, providers give you the money in return of some interest, and you pay them back within several weeks/months.The companies we're looking into
- Advanon - A Zurich based startup. Total Funding: 13.92M USD (13.6M CHF)
- MarketInvoice - A London based startup. Total Funding: 58.26M USD (45.8M GBP)
- Fundbox - A San Francisco based startup. Total Funding: 107.5 USD
Advanon, being a Swiss startup, has only gone through 2 rounds in the last 4 years. Noticebly, having a pretty large Series A round of 13.5M CHF. This is a very solid indication of the Swiss tech market as a whole, funding rounds aren't as quick, but they are definitely enough for a lean burn rate (keeping in mind the local salary ranges) and steady growth.
Posted in Technology