All I'll say is that just because something is more complex than you would like doesn't make it wrong.
I regularly have to tell vendors that the "we want to grow with you" pitch doesn't work with big enterprises. We want cost to be CAPPED. The right pricing model is a no brained entry price point that grows to a…
What's the end goal?
That's a function of your expectations. People get sad when they don't win the lotto but they don't celebrate every day they don't get hit by a car. It's not the odds, it's the expectations that are off.
It it isn't "next", it's next{x}. It's a function, not a variable.
Are you concentrating on system/OS monitoring or application monitoring? Also, what price point are you thinking about? Cloud or on premises?
The hash table is not a good example, because a hash is not a variable, it is a function. F(x) = "doohickey" when x = "wotsit" I think you guys are confusing variables and data types (or data structures) too, they are…
It's not insanity. Since time invariance is more of an abstract construct than a natural occurrence, I think you all but but guarantees that the same action will eventually yield a different result.
All I'll say is that just because something is more complex than you would like doesn't make it wrong.
I regularly have to tell vendors that the "we want to grow with you" pitch doesn't work with big enterprises. We want cost to be CAPPED. The right pricing model is a no brained entry price point that grows to a…
What's the end goal?
That's a function of your expectations. People get sad when they don't win the lotto but they don't celebrate every day they don't get hit by a car. It's not the odds, it's the expectations that are off.
It it isn't "next", it's next{x}. It's a function, not a variable.
Are you concentrating on system/OS monitoring or application monitoring? Also, what price point are you thinking about? Cloud or on premises?
The hash table is not a good example, because a hash is not a variable, it is a function. F(x) = "doohickey" when x = "wotsit" I think you guys are confusing variables and data types (or data structures) too, they are…
It's not insanity. Since time invariance is more of an abstract construct than a natural occurrence, I think you all but but guarantees that the same action will eventually yield a different result.