yeah, reminds me of working at technorati in 2005
You mention meta.org, you know you could work with us on it https://chanzuckerberg.com/join-us/openings/?team=engineerin... (search "meta" on that page)
As of several years ago the putlic http endpoints would easily do 1M/sec at peak times. Not just api, but web, images, et al.
In California you can get a DL without proof of legal residency.
Nope. (I work there).
But no one can do anything to generate new webhooks.
Bolt (bolt.com) - San Francisco, CA- https://bolt.com/jobs Bolt is radically simplifying online commerce in a way the world has never seen before. We combine top technology with a very careful and unique approach to…
... and pay taxes
Bolt - San Francisco, CA - https://bolt.com/ Bolt is a new payment platform that radically simplifies the exchange of money; it’s a reimagined money moving engine to solve the largest unsolved problems in payments. We…
Bolt | San Francisco, CA | Platform, DevOps, Security and Infrastructure Engineers | Full Time | Onsite https://bolt.com/jobs Bolt is a team of elite engineers from Stanford, MIT, Facebook, Twitter, Square, and other…
Though the sneaker page makes it very clear that its not ready for production use.
If you're classified as an "insider" then you can't even trade in the trading windows without a 10b5-1 plan. So at TWTR (I'm a former employee) knowing things like the MAU would probably make you an insider, which means…
Right, because no matter how much RAM you put in a machine, access is always the same speed.
The messages are not repeated in fanout, just the ids. I guess you would know that if you actually the links.
San Francsico, though remote work is plausible. Twitter is looking for all sorts of good engineers. The up to date list is always at http://twitter.com/positions.html.
yes
San Francisco: Twitter is hiring like crazy. We're working on about a million interesting problems at scale, with resources and the ability to open source almost everything. We also have a good deal of fun.…
Version 1 UUIDs require 128 bits.
Except in email everyone has a separate mailbox. On twitter everyone's mailbox overlaps and there are an infinite number of possible public views of the tweets (searches, lists, etc.)
NTP seems to work fairly well for this. It takes into account network latencies and attenuates over time.
That's the time of the first tweet. It saves us 30-something years of id space.
It turns out big problems are big. We're moving moving existing data to cassandra and putting a lot of new (mostly internal) data on cassandra.
yeah, reminds me of working at technorati in 2005
You mention meta.org, you know you could work with us on it https://chanzuckerberg.com/join-us/openings/?team=engineerin... (search "meta" on that page)
As of several years ago the putlic http endpoints would easily do 1M/sec at peak times. Not just api, but web, images, et al.
In California you can get a DL without proof of legal residency.
Nope. (I work there).
But no one can do anything to generate new webhooks.
Bolt (bolt.com) - San Francisco, CA- https://bolt.com/jobs Bolt is radically simplifying online commerce in a way the world has never seen before. We combine top technology with a very careful and unique approach to…
... and pay taxes
Bolt - San Francisco, CA - https://bolt.com/ Bolt is a new payment platform that radically simplifies the exchange of money; it’s a reimagined money moving engine to solve the largest unsolved problems in payments. We…
Bolt | San Francisco, CA | Platform, DevOps, Security and Infrastructure Engineers | Full Time | Onsite https://bolt.com/jobs Bolt is a team of elite engineers from Stanford, MIT, Facebook, Twitter, Square, and other…
Though the sneaker page makes it very clear that its not ready for production use.
If you're classified as an "insider" then you can't even trade in the trading windows without a 10b5-1 plan. So at TWTR (I'm a former employee) knowing things like the MAU would probably make you an insider, which means…
Right, because no matter how much RAM you put in a machine, access is always the same speed.
The messages are not repeated in fanout, just the ids. I guess you would know that if you actually the links.
San Francsico, though remote work is plausible. Twitter is looking for all sorts of good engineers. The up to date list is always at http://twitter.com/positions.html.
yes
San Francisco: Twitter is hiring like crazy. We're working on about a million interesting problems at scale, with resources and the ability to open source almost everything. We also have a good deal of fun.…
Version 1 UUIDs require 128 bits.
Except in email everyone has a separate mailbox. On twitter everyone's mailbox overlaps and there are an infinite number of possible public views of the tweets (searches, lists, etc.)
NTP seems to work fairly well for this. It takes into account network latencies and attenuates over time.
That's the time of the first tweet. It saves us 30-something years of id space.
It turns out big problems are big. We're moving moving existing data to cassandra and putting a lot of new (mostly internal) data on cassandra.