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Ryan J. Shaw
@rjs
SQL technology from the 90s running on a machine less powerful than a phone today: here's 10k rows for you, Ser, and I'm getting the next 10k ready as we speak REST APIs from 30 years later: here's 100 rows for you, you may request another 100 after a 60 second cooldown
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Jacek.degen.eth 🎩
@jacek
As a database developer for the last ten years, I find this incredibly funny! If it works, it works! Amazing how SQL has stayed relevant all these years! 100 $DEGEN
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Saxophone🎩🍖
@saxophone55.eth
I remembered how happy I felt looking at DEGEN's Dune in March this year. Until then, I hadn't touched Web3 at all, so contracts and everything else were a completely unknown world to me. But when I saw DEGEN's Dune formula, I got excited thinking "I can understand what this is doing!" 😆
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Paranoid Coder
@paranoidcoder
The whole NoSQL trend was really kicking off when I got my first dev job and I felt like I was missing something because relational DB's/SQL just seemed so much better in almost every use case. 10 years later I look back on that and appreciate that I had good intuition even as a newbie.
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Ryan J. Shaw
@rjs
Such an underappreciated technology 🤝
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