That’s kind of why Anthropic became a separate company in the first place though isn’t it? Dario Amodei was former head of research at OpenAI and left along with 6 or 7 others to form Anthropic.
I think that really depends on feature usage. You can use Argo/Cloudflare tunnels to route to private backends that are normally unroutable. In such a setup, it might be quite difficult to remove Cloudflare since then you have no edge network and no ability to reach your servers without another proxy/tunnel product.
If you're using other features like page rules you may need to stand up additional infrastructure to handle things like URI rewrites.
If you're using CDN, your backend might not be powerful enough to serve static assets without Cloudflare.
If your using all of the above, you're work to temporarily disable becomes fairly complicated.
It depends. The site is up, but now you're pumping 10x/100x the traffic. What are you scaling up?
Suddenly you're not blocking bots or malicious traffic. How many spam submissions or fake sales or other kinds of abuse are you dealing with? Is the rest of your organization ready to handle that?
N100 is my homelab, for playing. For instance I have a kubernetes cluster running KubeVirt, which runs 5 VMs, which ... have a kubernetes installation (so I have multiple worker nodes doing a "distributed filesystem" all of which is resharing disks from the same SSD). My production servers are generally older Xeons with ECC ram, which are also running kubernetes.
Its actually kind of ironic given i don't think WMF is particulary well managed or effective in its spending. I just think most of the criticisms of WMF spending are kind of terrible.
I write in the prompt the distro and its version and so far no much problem with old answers. If anything, it made me realise that some knowledge I had is outdated.
I made a Gemini Gem with some of my preferences (vi not nano, Ubuntu LTS, my hardware) and it's been quite efficient and on-point. A few times it forgets to check ancillary contexts and I have to feather things back on course.
Enough things have changed in Linuxland in recent years that some of those diversions, as you pointed out, helped me work from old knowledge to new knowledge.
Wouldnt be contribute with development? No idea about the Document Foundation but the Mozilla one prefer to waste donation money on CEO bonus and projects that nobody asked for.