Ray breaks the $1/TB barrier as the world’s most cost-efficient sorting system (anyscale.com) 36 points by mahvas 3y ago ↗ HN
[–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Is it also partially a record due to the cloud provider (AWS vs Alibaba Cloud)? [–] oldcap 3y ago ↗ AWS actually has a _higher_ unit cost than Alibaba Cloud [–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Couldn't the new record holder just use Alibaba to further break it or was it an S3 reason? [–] franklsf95 3y ago ↗ Alibaba Cloud isn't as cost-effective as it was in 2016. Also not sure how fast Alibaba's equivalent of S3 is. [–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Thanks! Just curious!
[–] oldcap 3y ago ↗ AWS actually has a _higher_ unit cost than Alibaba Cloud [–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Couldn't the new record holder just use Alibaba to further break it or was it an S3 reason? [–] franklsf95 3y ago ↗ Alibaba Cloud isn't as cost-effective as it was in 2016. Also not sure how fast Alibaba's equivalent of S3 is. [–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Thanks! Just curious!
[–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Couldn't the new record holder just use Alibaba to further break it or was it an S3 reason? [–] franklsf95 3y ago ↗ Alibaba Cloud isn't as cost-effective as it was in 2016. Also not sure how fast Alibaba's equivalent of S3 is. [–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Thanks! Just curious!
[–] franklsf95 3y ago ↗ Alibaba Cloud isn't as cost-effective as it was in 2016. Also not sure how fast Alibaba's equivalent of S3 is. [–] dataMike 3y ago ↗ Thanks! Just curious!
[–] mluo 3y ago ↗ With inflation in mind, wouldn't there a larger gap between Ray's sort and the previous WR holder?
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