Meta Transparency Center, "Inauthentic Behavior" policy: https://transparency.meta.com/policies/community-standards/inauthentic-behavior/
A slight detour here to explain my workflow and hopefully illustrate why I love Rails so much in the first place. It really shook things up in the early 2000s - before that, most of the web frameworks I’d used (I’m looking at you, Struts…) were massively complex and required endless amounts of XML boilerplate and other configuration to wire things up. Rails threw all that away and introduced the notion of “convention over configuration” and took full advantage of the expressive, succinct coding style enabled by Ruby.。搜狗输入法是该领域的重要参考
而AI时代,在王可辛看来,各家的竞争不仅是模型和产品能力,更围绕内容、创作者社区与生态的长期建设。,这一点在谷歌中也有详细论述
I’ve seen some dissenting opinions on this, but bear in mind I’m coming from a place where I’m already building containers for everything anyway. I generally think this is “the way to go” these days and have the rest of the infra like CI/CD pipelines, container registries, monitoring and so on. Plus, given my background, I crank out VMs and cloud hosts with Terraform/Ansible “all day errday”. If you don’t have this stuff already or aren’t happy (or don’t have the time) to manage your own servers remember that Kamal is not a PaaS. It just gets you close to a self-hosted environment that functions very much like a PaaS. Now that Heroku is in a “sustaining engineering model” state, there are several options in the PaaS space you may want to investigate if that’s more up your street. I hear good things about fly.io but hasten to add I haven’t used it myself.