True, and funnily enough french people don't use yearly gross. Most of the time they use monthly net, and, in the context of salary negotiations, will specify over how many months. E.g. "2000 net sur 13 mois"
Imho, the java aspect of it matters much less than the backend concepts. Are you already familiar with those ?
There's quite a lot of stuff to learn on the backend and it really depends on which layer you want to focus on. If you're interested in developing business services then i would recommend writing a restful API (for example for a to-do app) with spring boot and your preferred flavor of SQL database. That covers a lot already. From there you can look at how to scale performance up (caching, queuing, asynchronous).
Is it really that surprising that planes are cheaper than trains ? Rails require massive investments and upkeep cost. It's also much more difficult to run different operators on the infrastructure so there is very little competition. Not sure a tax is going to change any of that.
The article makes a good job of explaining the requirement but it doesn't actually explain why expanding OTEL to support a jdbc exporter is not the best solution. Other than "it's not straightforward".
Tracing is not as trivial as it seems and I would be warry of rolling out a bespoke solution.
A few questions that come to mind:
- what do you mean when you say the traces should be "stateless"?
- why a SQL database? Traces typically have evolving schemas
- why can't this be done with a straightforward Filter implementation?
The study specifically selected people with no substance abuse problem.. if anything the author of the study were wary of what you say is a reactionary perspective.