It sounds way less offensive to those who decry the original terminology’s problematic roots but still keeps its meaning intact.

  • holgersson
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    164 months ago

    We’re using server and agent, but im also a proponent of “captain” and “crew”

    • @NicolaHaskell
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      34 months ago

      I mentally replaced cars with boats recently and it’s been inducing nautical terminology everywhere I speak. Cap’n and Crew sounds great for this usage, it feels honest without the shock of great grandpa’s heavyweight authoritarianism. I usually wind up stepping down to Spongebob or Pirates to filter out seriousness too, as long as the packet arrives and the replicas are jolly.

    • @[email protected]
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      14 months ago

      The thing is that master has a different connotation in IT than server does. Such as in master/slave pairs for fault tolerance.

      • holgersson
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        14 months ago

        Fair enough. Im in devops and the first thing I thought about was Jenkins, where “server” and “agent” fit quite well.

        I dont think master/slave is that good of a naming scheme for fault tolerance either, since the “slave” doesnt do work so that the master doesnt have to, but it’s rather an active/reserve kind of thing.

        But I also admit that using different terms that fit best for every usecase would only cause more confusion than good.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 months ago

          I agree that active/reserve is a better way of saying it, and that’s the way I’ve always said it when working with these systems. Honestly I may have never heard master slave in actual use in 15 years of regularly describing such systems.