Uniswap V3 liquidity pools are managed as NFTs. Not your main point I know, but people often think of NFTs as simply buy and sell art on opensea. A liquidity pool has clear value.
What do you mean by "managed as NFTs"? A liquidity pool is a contract where people put their coins in and the contract gives them a percentage ownership of all assets in the contract and they get a small fee off the trades done in it. Are you saying that the proof of ownership is a non fungible token? That seems like a small technical detail, it's not the token that has value, it's the assets in the pool, you could easily do it with fungible tokens or with simply a record of ownership in the contract.
All due respect, this isn't burn out. This is boredom or being uninspired. It can be a drudge, uninteresting, and procrastinated, but actual burnout is a very different beast.
I have mortgage, wife, kids also and continue to plug along, but know the difference.
I work on low code cloud ETL tools. We provide the flexibility for the customer to do stupid things. This means we have extremely high variance in resource utilization.
An on demand button press can start a processes that runs for multiple days, and this is expected. A job can do 100k API requests or read/transform/write millions of records from a database, this is also expected. Out of memory errors happen often and are expected. It's not our bad code, its the customer's bad code.
Since jobs are run as microservices on isolated machines, this is all fine. A customer(or multiple at once) can set up something badly, run out of resources, and fail or go really slow and nobody is effected but them.
Its not automatic but it has the potential for more isolation by definition.
If your service has memory leak, crash it only takes down the service. It is still up to your system to handle such a failure gracefully. If such a service is a critical dependency then your system fails. But if it is not then your service can still partially function.
If your monolith has memory leak, or crash it takes down the whole monolith.
I didn't realize Reddit API development was "forced".
Whether they enjoy it or not is beside the point.
Moderators are providing value to Reddit. If all mods quit, and no one stepped up to take their place, what would happen? Now who deserves to take profit monetarily for that value?
As far as Reddit "development" they should have stopped a long time ago, the site is horrible to use and has been for a long time.