Arduino and C++ to work on the ESP range of embedded wifi chipsets but has also let me get into working with other dev boards like cheap allwinner tech stuff for fun for now. Docker (finally) in a production setting…
They have "bounded staleness" as an option for consistency, but obviously it doesn't break the laws of physics, latency is latency and you still have to account for that somewhat but at least you have the bounds to work…
Documentation is still a bit all over the place, at least for the .Net space. Some information is only apparent after diving into GitHub issues, it's not a total disaster but could definitely be better. Especially when…
Didn't HP design and I think prototype something like this with memristors, calling it 'The Machine'? edit So HP built one with 160Tb of memory, I remember it being proposed with memristors but haven't been able to…
When I was working with AliCloud I ran into an issue in that during peak hours, we'd want to scale-up, and they'd be "out of stock" of virtual instances... Which is fine if you have the budget to keep a load of…
Arduino and C++ to work on the ESP range of embedded wifi chipsets but has also let me get into working with other dev boards like cheap allwinner tech stuff for fun for now. Docker (finally) in a production setting…
They have "bounded staleness" as an option for consistency, but obviously it doesn't break the laws of physics, latency is latency and you still have to account for that somewhat but at least you have the bounds to work…
Documentation is still a bit all over the place, at least for the .Net space. Some information is only apparent after diving into GitHub issues, it's not a total disaster but could definitely be better. Especially when…
Didn't HP design and I think prototype something like this with memristors, calling it 'The Machine'? edit So HP built one with 160Tb of memory, I remember it being proposed with memristors but haven't been able to…
When I was working with AliCloud I ran into an issue in that during peak hours, we'd want to scale-up, and they'd be "out of stock" of virtual instances... Which is fine if you have the budget to keep a load of…