The blog post mentions "P99 of ~1s of producer-to-consumer latency". What about just producer latency i.e. message successfully received into the queue ready to be picked up? S3 writes seem be in the low 100s of ms so I assume that's part of the quoted end-to-end latency.
Sounds like you're currently optimized for throughput, not latency. (I work with customers for whom 10ms of latency for a 128kB write is too high.) What are your plans to improve latency?
None currently, if you need latency that low WarpStream is not a good fit and you should probably stick with something more traditional like a very well tuned Kafka cluster.
We've been featuring 3 devtools companies that are hiring for technical roles in the weekly https://console.dev/ newsletter since the start of this year. It's been seeing some very good click -> application rates.
We're now in the process of building out profiles on the website and are working with the companies to add interesting details about things like dev processes, tools used, tech stack, how planning works, how on-call works, etc.
The story behind Svix and how the idea developed following Tom's work on the end-to-end encrypted backend product EteSync and Etebase is interesting, and something I covered with him in an interview last month:
I've been using Deepnote to do some energy modelling for an academic paper I'm writing, and it's been great. The UI is much nicer than any other Jupyter editor I've used, and the integration with GitHub works well. Just started collaborating with some other researchers on another project so the real-time editing is coming in handy. So much better than using Excel.
I've been using Plausible on https://console.dev for 2 weeks now and will be paying once the trial ends. The UI is very straightforward and it makes it easy to see the key stats: visitors, popular pages, referrers, and goal tracking. We really don't need anything else and Plausible's reasonable, privacy-first approach to how they implement tracking[1] fits our philosophy. Google Analytics supports Google's mass tracking and I like the fact I have the option to run Plausible myself if I want.
Since our site is deployed on Cloudflare Workers, I had tried Cloudflare's Privacy Analytics but the dashboard data retention of just 1 week is insufficient. And unless you use their beacon, the network stats seem completely inaccurate.
I'm in the process of starting https://console.dev - a free weekly email digest of the best tools and new beta releases for developers.
I really enjoy trying new tools (APIs, products, SaaS, opensource, CLIs, libraries, etc) but it's difficult to keep up to date. You have to continually check Twitter, HN, Reddit, and loads of other forums and blogs. Console aims to pick out the best few each week and say we'll what is good/not so good about each one. No payment for inclusion.