Someone reply with a link to the source code so I can see exactly what it is doing, without having to take an internet rando's word for it.
Better yet, let me compile it myself.
Of course it is not the whole technology stack, but it is something at least. If your evaluation leads to potential problems, you can create issues right there on the github project!
Wow. Such wrong claims.
I had already replied to you in a sibling comment, refuting your points, but will give one more proof (not that I really need to):
_acco, the top level commenter relevant to this discussion, commented at some time, say x.
layer8 commented, replying to _acco, 7 hours ago (as can be seen on the page at the time of my writing this comment, i.e. right now).
I then replied to layer8, 6 hours ago.
_acco replied back to layer8 5 hours ago.
All this is visible right now on the page; and if people check it a few hours later, the relative time deltas will remain the same, obviously. (But not if they check after 24 hours, in which case all comments will show as one day ago.)
So there was a 1 hour gap between layer8's comment and mine, and a 2 hour gap between layer8's comment and _acco's reply.
If you think 2 hours is the same as "almost immediately", as you said above, I have nothing more to say to you, except that our perceptions of time are highly different.
Perception of time is subjective.
Zalando is the company. ”Postgres Operator” is the software.
Happy user here, not much complaints about the operator come to mind.
When pressed about this particular time detail, ChatGPT elaborates: While "YYYY-MM-DD" is a common date format, it's not complete for a timestamp, which typically includes both date and time information. A complete timestamp might look like "YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss" to include hours, minutes, and seconds.
So, no, this post doesn't contain a timestamp, and it already fails in its own advice.
<meta property="article:modified_time" content="2023-11-15T13:40:37+01:00">
<meta property="article:published_time" content="2023-11-15T10:12:30+01:00">Certainly major software updates can break things, but that is why you can (though not always quite easily) downgrade for a while after an update.