For most of my trips, a huge % of the travel time is outside the actual flight time. Trip to the airport, security, boarding, waiting to take off, and reverse on the other side (with addition of potentially getting a rental car). This can be solved without supersonic solutions (e.g. flying private), but adoption is low for business travel – is it too expensive?
Separately, I wonder if a lot of the demand is also obviated by in-air wifi.
> adoption is low for business travel – is it too expensive
Yes. Most companies won't even spring for business/first class, which is 10-20% the cost of a charter. Unless your time is both limited and worth 4 digits per hour, it's not worth it.
You might also look at “semi-private” solutions like JSX, if they go where you want to go. Should significantly cut down on the time outside of the flight itself.
When your linter or static analyser says something, you know exactly what it means. When AI says something - many a time, it doesnt make sense. And I use AI code review tools every day.
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Gladly is at the forefront of building retail customer service AI. Our AI is live in production with customer-centric brands like Crate & Barrel, Ulta Beauty, and Allbirds. We have the ingredients that make AI work: rich data, close customer partnerships, and a strong engineering culture.
We're hiring Senior & Staff Software Engineers to lead major AI & Automation initiatives. This is a high-impact, hands-on role for someone who wants to ship fast, collaborate deeply, and build systems that help real people.
You should have:
- 5-10+ years of full-stack experience (Go, TypeScript, React, Postgres a plus)
- Experience with generative AI, multi-agent systems, RAG pipelines (can be personal projects / side projects)
- A bias toward impact and product thinking
- Excellent collaboration and communication skills
Bonus: Entrepreneurial or other leadership experience.
We're a remote-first company with competitive pay, meaningful equity, and a focus on doing real work with great people.
When you're debugging issues, read the code for the libraries you're using before going to their documentation. It's a great way to get exposed to other people's code.
Nope, because unions merge columns. `select * from Actor union select * from Movies` gives you [(0, "Harrison Ford"), (0, "Indiana Jones")], which is a problem because we can't tell which rows are actors and which rows are movies. What we need is [(0, "Harrison Ford", null, null), (null, null, 0, "Indiana Jones")].
Yes, you could use union. But then you have to pad the columns of the other tables with NULLs to arrive at the same output and carefully count. And we all hate counting.
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