For a basic crash course in Python, is there anything better than the top rated Udemy course, can YT offer something better ? I really don't mind paying the 12$ it costs on Udemy.
> I've noticed that in recent months, even apart from these outages, cloudflare has been contributing to a general degradation and shittification of the internet. I'm seeing a lot more "prove you're human", "checking to make sure you're human", and there is normally at the very least a delay of a few seconds before the site loads.
> Even today the brick and mortar stores of multi-million (billion) dollar companies have dirty bathrooms and broken lights.
Last place I worked at (10M investment) the men's pisser didn't flush and the toilet paper was brown sandpaper that smelt like shit even before you used it. Horrible TL lights though, so not quite a horror scene.
Made a similar mistake like this once. While just playing around to see what's possible I upload some data to the AWS algo that will recommended products to your users based on everyone's previous purchases.
I uploaded a small xls with uid and prodid columns and then kind of forgot about it.
A few months later I get a note from bank saying your account is overdrawn. The account is only used for freelancing work which I wasn't doing at the time, so I never checked that account.
Looks like AWS was charging me over 1K / month while the algo continuously worked on that bit of data that was uploaded one time. They charged until there was no money left.
That was about 5K in weekend earnings gone. Several months worth of salary in my main job. That was a lot of money for me.
I worked in a billing department, and learned to be healthily paranoid about such things. I want to regularly check what I'm billed for. I of course check all my bank accounts' balances at least once a day. All billing emails are marked important in my inbox, and I actually open them.
And of course I give every online service a separate virtual credit card (via privacy dot com, but your bank may issue them directly) with a spend limit set pretty close to the expected usage.
The owner must have subscriptions to these services. Some paywalls are absolute and it bypasses all of them with ease. I don't see it now but there was a time when archiving a reddit page showed the username that their bot was using.
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