what about them?
that seems a little harsh. I think there is a real usability gap which this takes a crack at. Some ideas like using viewing a linux dir over _ssh_ using native UI components.. seem cool. I do agree, some of these do…
it will only get cheaper in the long run
[dead]
definitely! Reminds me of the golang saying > Don't Communicate by Sharing Memory; Share Memory by Communicating https://www.php.cn/faq/1796714651.html
haha I couldn't help but silently mouth "BUT WHHYY" before I clicked this link
I think its great for recruiting. This signals to the world their investment in making Devs happier (one of top two reasons mentioned was "devs were happier with Kotlin")
well it could be a lot cheaper to hire the AI model instead of a human?
> You need to wait a bit before you can start faithfully translating the meaning I guess it's possible that the AI learns about a specific person over time? That way it can be confident about what's being said as soon…
But wouldn't the same issue apply to user-space TCP implementations too? User-space TCP implementations too could have "path-dependent sequence of accidents" which a power user might eventually need to figure out?
where did you end up going? I love Austin but its a little too hot during the summer.
I think getting customers to sign up is the hardest part. Next they could start adding opt-in features (probably already in the works?) which cost an extra few dollars a month each?
I'm a little disappointed that the author doesn't explain why throwing the exception is much slower.
But the problem is, fixing existing broken stuff might not be rewarded as much as working on the "new feature". This means that if I focus on just fixing the broken stuff, I'd be managed out. Even say I put in the extra…
hmm you expect to see 300,000GB or 300TB per node? What does that mean?
>Keep in mind that a freeze could slow down application processes for things like a loan, a job, or social service benefits hmm.. what does that mean? I can be refused a loan if I forget to unfreeze before applying?
says this in the article at the end: >We ran this benchmark against a single-tenant environment, with levels of resources that we reserve for our enterprise customers.
This is sad :( hetzner charges extra for ipv4 address, and this means I couldn't run `git clone` without paying extra.
thank you!
>It's on the todo list however I'm curious, how would you support this usecase?
cant that be said about buying a home anywhere?
oh wow really?
hmm why wouldnt Biden sign?
Folks are workin on it https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-autonomous-car-is-co...
Their website says >In addition, each API request runs in a full browser, and we'll even solve all CAPTCHAs. Mimicking completely what a human will do. Wow how would they do that?
what about them?
that seems a little harsh. I think there is a real usability gap which this takes a crack at. Some ideas like using viewing a linux dir over _ssh_ using native UI components.. seem cool. I do agree, some of these do…
it will only get cheaper in the long run
[dead]
definitely! Reminds me of the golang saying > Don't Communicate by Sharing Memory; Share Memory by Communicating https://www.php.cn/faq/1796714651.html
haha I couldn't help but silently mouth "BUT WHHYY" before I clicked this link
I think its great for recruiting. This signals to the world their investment in making Devs happier (one of top two reasons mentioned was "devs were happier with Kotlin")
well it could be a lot cheaper to hire the AI model instead of a human?
> You need to wait a bit before you can start faithfully translating the meaning I guess it's possible that the AI learns about a specific person over time? That way it can be confident about what's being said as soon…
But wouldn't the same issue apply to user-space TCP implementations too? User-space TCP implementations too could have "path-dependent sequence of accidents" which a power user might eventually need to figure out?
where did you end up going? I love Austin but its a little too hot during the summer.
I think getting customers to sign up is the hardest part. Next they could start adding opt-in features (probably already in the works?) which cost an extra few dollars a month each?
I'm a little disappointed that the author doesn't explain why throwing the exception is much slower.
But the problem is, fixing existing broken stuff might not be rewarded as much as working on the "new feature". This means that if I focus on just fixing the broken stuff, I'd be managed out. Even say I put in the extra…
hmm you expect to see 300,000GB or 300TB per node? What does that mean?
>Keep in mind that a freeze could slow down application processes for things like a loan, a job, or social service benefits hmm.. what does that mean? I can be refused a loan if I forget to unfreeze before applying?
says this in the article at the end: >We ran this benchmark against a single-tenant environment, with levels of resources that we reserve for our enterprise customers.
This is sad :( hetzner charges extra for ipv4 address, and this means I couldn't run `git clone` without paying extra.
thank you!
>It's on the todo list however I'm curious, how would you support this usecase?
cant that be said about buying a home anywhere?
oh wow really?
hmm why wouldnt Biden sign?
Folks are workin on it https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-autonomous-car-is-co...
Their website says >In addition, each API request runs in a full browser, and we'll even solve all CAPTCHAs. Mimicking completely what a human will do. Wow how would they do that?