In what way? Adhering to the regulations are quite simple and cheap. You just need your users consent to use their data and take measures to protect it. If you don’t have their consent or protect the data you’re doing it wrong - even before the GDPR came into action.
For others like me who are not to keen on the update; I made a quick (and dirty) Chrome extension that reverts it back to the old way; kind of: https://github.com/olssonm/github-dash
Absolutely terrible update; can no longer see what repos are private, nor are they sorted in order of "last updated". Very bad user experience and messed up my workflow somewhat (before I knew that the repo on top was the last one I pushed to to quickly make a PR or the like)
Private repos have a lock next to them, while public repos have a book icon. I did however prefer the highlight. And on the sort order--I don't understand what it's doing at the moment, but it's neither "created at" or "last updated" which makes things hard to find. Will definitely take some getting used to, unfortunately.
Got the mail this morning (Europe) and my first thought was "WTF"? Then "How the hell do I migrate all my customers"?
I've used Mandrill for transactional mails for 4-5 years now. And always when I've had a project that requires some kind of e-mail notifications, password resets etc. I've always recommended Mandrill to my customers.
So here I am, running and handling 8+ Mandrill accounts (many customers requires exclusive access to account, have one for personal projects etc. ). A few of them in the free tier, most of them payed.
These changes will involve a whole lot of headache for me, and will sadly affect a few of my customers too.
Firstly; from around $40/month as our e-mail costs are today; to more than a total of $240/month. Not the end of the world in itself, but:
Secondly: NOT A SINGLE ONE of my customers, or me, want or have any use of MailChimp. They are two very different services with two very different purposes. Now I will have walk through with my customers on how they set up a Mailchimp account, explain to them why they have to do this and merge the account with their Mandrill one, explain to them "Oh, no – this is just a $10/month service that you don't need, or want, but have to signup to to enable those password reset emails or yours".
Oh man... Of course I will change service in most of these cases, but that's also a pain, have to get in touch with the customers IT-departments to change DNS-settings, verify senders and all that – not a great start to this day...
The whole idea is what we in Sweden call "hål i huvudet"; "Hole in the head" (as in missing a brain, not shooting someone).
Completely agree with all of your points. I just finished migrating from Mandrill to a new Sendgrid account and it was pretty seamless (although I had a head start because I have used Sendgrid before). It took me about 45 minutes to update everything, including: creating an account, adding appropriate DNS records for whitelisting, and updating my application and server settings.
It's extremely unfortunate that we have to do this, but no way would I stay with Mandrill after this decision.
Actually, in both Europe and North America there is really good teams and players who are not in the NHL and the highest leagues in Europe.
For example, in Swedens Division 1 (third highest league), players can get a full time salary for playing hockey – but of course an agent won't help them because they get a provision on player salaries, and they are not interested if the salaries are too low.
So when a contract expires for a Division 1 player, they usually end up in a situation where their only chance to land a new club is through contacts, and that usually means in the same country and/or region. But there is a huge demand for European players in North America, and NA-players in Europe.
So far we have around 200 players, and two dozen clubs. 50% Sweden, 25% US, 15% Canada and the rest various other European countries.