The tweet actually reflects the culture of Carta, how they care about their customers and the experience I had when I used them. Carta was charging me $8,000 per year at the time I used them. I found an alternative that had all the features for 10% of the price (Cake Equity - https://www.cakeequity.com/ - for the curious). It took me multiple calls with customer representative to cancel my account because Carta did not want to automatically add an option for people to cancel their plan.
There are competitors that have (1) better product (2) cheaper and (3) better customer success. Nobody has to stay with Carta. Just move away, and you can get better service at an affordable price. I used Cake Equity, but I am sure there are other options available.
> It took me multiple calls with customer representative to cancel my account because Carta did not want to automatically add an option for people to cancel their plan.
This is not how most people would describe "care about [...] customers."
Datadog | Senior Software Engineer | NYC/Paris/Madrid | Full-Time | Static Analysis
We are building a static analysis engine (https://github.com/DataDog/datadog-static-analyzer) that works across the development lifecycle: IDE -> git hook -> git pull request -> git push. Our product is currently in private beta (see https://www.datadoghq.com/static-analysis/) and we are working hard on expanding its capabilities.
If you work with Rust and/or Tree-Sitter, we would love to talk to you!
This really excites me. I had 2 Cybertruck reservations, I cancelled them and ordered an Aptera. I think this is what we really need: smaller car with efficiency in mind.
Those things are the Duke Nukem Forever of electric cars. I remember them taking reservations back in the 00s. I love the idea but I have no idea how the company still exists as they haven't delivered anything in almost two decades.
I started to use the product recently and I love the product CoScreen. Still a few bugs but it's definitely better than Zoom to collaborate between developers!
Codiga is the Grammarly for code. We are working on a new static code analysis engine that analyzes code and suggests fixes in real time in the IDE and in pull requests. Developers can develop their own static code analysis rules in their browser.
We are looking for engineers to develop our IDE plugins, especially for VS Code and Visual Studio. If you have experience in building plugins or experience in C# and want to build IDE plugins for VisualStudio, join us!
If you are interested, shoot me an email julien at codiga dot io
For templates and patterns, we started Codiga [1] where you can define smart code snippets [2] that depends on your environment and can be parameterized by the user when being inserted.
We have a collection of existing snippets user can already use in their IDE on the Codiga Hub [3]. Developers can define their own snippets and share them with their team.
We are still developing the product. It works with IntelliJ and VS Code and we have already a lot of users on the platform. Would love to hear your feedback!
Totally agree with you. I own a Tesla and I am definitely not a big fan of how they communicate or treat their customer (customer service is just horrible). But in the present case, this is not a tesla issue, just an issue of two irresponsible people. The car would have beeped thousands times before crashing (at least very loud beeps for not applying force on the steering wheel and other loud beeps because the car was going off road and hitting a tree - obstacle detection).
Yeah, it seems to me that this sort of safety measure only has to be strong enough to force people to go out of their way to circumvent it: anyone who circumvents it has ipso facto displayed malicious intent and should be liable for any damage caused.