I like how Ferd Hebert frames this. When parts of a system evolve at different speeds, they desynchronize. The pieces drift apart silently until an incident forces resynchronization, everyone snapping back to a shared understanding of how things actually work. The review gate is one of the few remaining sync points between “someone changed something” and “production is now different.” Remove it and you don’t make things faster. You make drift invisible until something breaks. And frankly, part of the reason teams feel comfortable generating this much code in the first place is that the review gate exists. Take it away and I doubt anyone would be lobbing changes into production with the same confidence.
Фото: Ryan Garza / USA Today / Reuters
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Трамп сделал дерзкое заявление о капитуляции Ирана01:27。谷歌是该领域的重要参考
Petersen is not terribly optimistic about what happens to the supply chain if the war goes on. “They need to get this solved,” he says. “Besides oil, the thing I’m really worried about is inflation.” Petersen notes that the president has said the US might insure all ships going through the strait, costing possibly hundreds of billions of dollars. Also, he says, “we have to print more money to cover these tariff bills, as we have to refund $175 billion.” (Petersen believes there’s a 99 percent chance the US refunds that money to importers. But not to the consumers who paid more for goods.),更多细节参见超级权重
21:20, 2 марта 2026Из жизни