Art museum restaurants and cafes can be a great place to hangout for the introverted flâneur. They often have good food, good service, and are in the center of town. Being attached to a museum, they usually feel the need to be mindful of aesthetics, both atmospheric and food quality wise.
Better: there are often very few people in them, especially compared to popular and tourist places. The prices might be higher, but you get what you pay for.
The Ludwig Museum restaurant in Cologne is a good example.1 It has all of the above, but is also a three or five minute walk from the central station. It has a busy pedestrian walkway/plaza with no stores. There’s ample outside seating, well shaded. This means a chill spot for a cold beverage with endless people watching.
Also, the museum is good. Highly recommended.
“bottomless pit of plagiarism.” I mean, obviously. Someone should do something.
“best portland cat cafes.” Also “Brazilian Facesitting Fart Games.”
“hard mode is where status lives” Cult-talk.
“The executive swoop and poop.” PagerDuty-talk.
“The waffle makers are standing by.” On being “rigorously OK.”
And, that article keeps giving: “There’s something more dynamic about making your waffle and pouring the batter and the anticipation of it coming out hot and steamy.”
More: “They canvassed dozens of chicken farms in search of a liquefied egg product that could be scrambled in hotel microwaves”
Introducing VMware Tanzu Greenplum 7.5: Enhanced Performance for Data-Intensive Workloads - VMware Tanzu Greenplum 7.5 enhances performance for data-intensive workloads with optimized query execution, efficient maintenance, scalable streaming, streamlined AutoML, and robust geospatial capabilities. These improvements reduce processing times and resource demands, making it a reliable choice for analytical and operational data environments. Tanzu Greenplum is a robust data warehousing and analytics platform built on open-source Postgres, designed to aggregate and analyze vast amounts of data at scale.
Announcing The Forrester Wave™: DevOps Platforms, Q2 2025 - “GitHub Actions is becoming a de facto standard. For continuous integration in particular, competitors seem to be converging toward a slightly modified version of GitHub Actions. It’s not a select-all/copy/paste, but in some cases, it’s close — a copy/paste with a few extra lines in the YAML.”
Broadcom Q2 FY 2025 Sees Record Revenue, Solid AI and Software Growth - “Currently, over 87% of Broadcom’s 10,000 largest enterprise customers have transitioned to VCF, which allows enterprises to modernize on-premises private clouds, run container-based applications, and manage AI workloads.”
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Platform Engineering: Evolution, Trends, and Future Impact on Software Delivery
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Great episode of Conversations with Tyler this week. Some his best episodes are with people so far removed from his (past) interests and intellectual spheres. Also, Any Austin asks a lot of questions back to Tyler and they’re interesting ones. // I listened to this flâneuring around Cologne. There’s not many things I like more than that combination, whatever the location may be.
Here I am presenting at SREDay Cologne:
I’m thinking of renaming this newsletter “Coté’s Waste book.” First, no one (who doesn’t speak German, maybe Dutch?) can pronounce “Wunderkammer,” and they all ask what it means. And second, I don’t know, the waste book is my favorite part, and I think its definition more closely fits what happens here: more of a combination of a wunderkammer, notes, and (not really, but it’s fine) longer articles. That said, I just realized that “wastebook” is actually two words. If “daybook” can be one word, seems like waste book should be. That doesn’t seem right, but whatever. Maybe I’ll stick with the one word - English as she is spoke, and all that.
//
If you liked The Lounge Show reference recently, looking at the playlists, you’ll probably like another KOOP Austin show, Crate Digger’s Gold.
And, yes, of course in Cologne you should also sit at one of the giant, packed places on a plaza and order a giant joint of pork, freshly made schnitzel, etc., and an endless series of tiny glasses of Kölsch. The flâneur‘s proper response to any recommendation counter-proposal should be: yes, and…why not both?