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536 points helloguillecl | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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rcarmo ◴[] No.45653174[source]
I stopped using Postman when it magically started connecting to a central server for… nothing useful, really. I have no idea why people would design software this way, especially a development tool that should work with any web server, under any network condition (including fully offline against localhost).

Now I just have a Makefile with a bunch of curl invocations, or Python tests with requests to match against expected responses.

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mattmanser ◴[] No.45653336[source]
Pretty obvious why if you use the software.

I get the whining, but teams need ways to share their complex workflows, and teams are where the money is for all dev focused software.

That's who pays for all your tools to have free versions.

People who use make and curl to jury rig some unshareable solution together that no-one else in their company would even bother trying to use aren't worth any money to companies.

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mixologist ◴[] No.45653397[source]
My experience is the opposite.

Teams that are knowledgeable jury rig their own custom solutions without all the enterprise cruft. They make solutions that fix their problem and they do it faster than the teams who use bloated enterprise solutions.

I am tired of seeing over engineered enterprise solutions that that are implemented and never used because they can’t be integrated into the dev workflow easily. Simple bash script that does the task it was designed to do beats any enterprise crap.

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1. bravetraveler ◴[] No.45653529{3}[source]
The wisdom of pipes! I'd share these workflows the exact same way we share others [ie: BASH, Ansible]: Git. Needs nothing more than a directory, though an SSH daemon is quite nice.

Those of us who can survive without desperate monetization plays are worth quite a lot, actually. They say 'jury rig', we say 'engineer'.