I don't get it but there's a good chunk of people who are ready to jump on anything that looks even slightly comercial by even one single aspect. I've been told my personal blog was AI generated blog spam once in the past when I had literally nothing to sell. I also don't understand the fundamental issue with having a commercial involvement as long as you aren't trying to BS people or shove advertising down their throats.
I mean, they're selling something. According to the TFA, it's an abstraction that may or may not use a backend message queue, but your app shouldn't care. So they're not selling a message queue, but they're selling something.
But what's the issue with making a post and discussing how a product one made solves an issue? GPT-3 and DALL-E are both products with a pay-per-play model. So is AWS and S3. We talk about those things all the time with no scrutiny or suspicion.
It's hard not to open https://www.chiselstrike.com/ and notice that you sell something and then assume your blog post is part of that endeavor.
My personal opinion is that if you don't want to come off as selling something because your genuinely interested in tech, just publish under a different domain or pseudoname
this is a bad take. people work on problems they find interesting. it follows that you write about them because you can. the author has worked on kernel hypervisors, databases and now doing stuff around code generation. btw their code is apache 2 and on github, what they sell is the hosted version.
I don't get it but there's a good chunk of people who are ready to jump on anything that looks even slightly comercial by even one single aspect. I've been told my personal blog was AI generated blog spam once in the past when I had literally nothing to sell. I also don't understand the fundamental issue with having a commercial involvement as long as you aren't trying to BS people or shove advertising down their throats.