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Cake day: June 21st, 2023

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  • I would encourage you to see how other countries handle things. At least in NL, there are trains and busses too, and you can do all three if you want (train, bus, and bike). It’ll still be faster to commute by all three of those from halfway across the country than it is for most people to drive to San Francisco every morning (I know the SF commute, not the Chicago one).

    Rural areas in all countries I’ve visited (which is a lot) pretty much require cars. There’s usually a train stop somewhat nearby, but you’d just drive where you need to go.

    But when several states are there size of European countries, it puts some of that into perspective.

    The size has never really been the issue. Suburbs aren’t the size of an entire state, and cities (okay. ignoring Texas) aren’t the size of European countries on their own. The issue is a lack of funding for alternative transportation methods.

    Amtrack is dogshit. I don’t think anyone, even in the US, debates that. Now imagine Amtrack, but it’s a high speed rail that stops at the station every 30m or so. Also, it goes to every city in the country. Now you have a good public transportation system, and it’d be on par with some of the worst public transportation I’ve seen in Europe.














  • The success rate of main branch builds compounds this further. It has fallen to 70.8%, its lowest in over five years – 30% of attempts to merge code for production are now failing.

    The integration bottleneck finding is credible. If you’re generating code faster than your team can review and integrate it, that’s a genuine problem this data is consistent with.

    I disagree here. If more attempts are failing, then more attempts are needed to merge a branch. If the pipeline is running more and fewer branches are merging, it’s also possible that people need to go through more revisions to merge their code than they needed to before.

    People using AI to write their entire PR will find that fixing issues with it takes more work. They often don’t know how the PR works. I wouldn’t be surprised if this resulted in PRs taking longer to merge as a result, which would contradict CircleCI’s claims of teams benefiting from AI.

    I believe the report has insufficient data to draw any meaningful conclusions. The data is interesting, at least.