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Tried searching for "red high top sneakers under $40", and the first result was a shaft seal? The next result was a red high top sneaker so good, but it had a price of '0', bad. Then it started showing basically random items skin care, dog food, white sneakers, dog bandanas etc. The price limit started to get ignored.


Thanks for the feedback! We're working to improve search results right now. Bummer the price filter got ignored, we rolled out natural language filter extraction recently, clearly we have a bug there :(


Hi, we just pushed up a fix to search. You should see much better results for "red high top sneakers under $40".

The price errors stem from a bad sync between our product database and OpenSearch index. We're working on fixing this now. Let us know what you think!


I would presume you replied to the wrong user

Also, I'm always mystified in these Launch threads how much very simple QA gets pushed down onto users, or early adopters as is the case in these threads. How would you have spotted that bad sync if you didn't have someone giving you free QA in an Internet forum?


Oops! Responded to the wrong comment.

It's just two of us and we're working 120 hour weeks... don't have time for everything! We love feedback, it's super helpful.


I used to monitor CO2 in the house with Awair units, specifically those because it allegedly interacted with my Ecobee AC control. So I could say if the levels were rising, force the fan on to push fresh air around, although I'm not sure I ever got it working correctly.

It's a big problem for me, as living in Florida basically means the AC runs almost year round. In the colder months we open the windows as much as we can to let the levels drop, but from spring through autumn it's just too hot to keep them open, as it just pushes the AC harder to cool more and more, while also increasing the humidity.

We definitely started getting better nights sleep once we had either the windows open, or the door to the bedroom open. I also rarely shut the door to my office as I was getting so sleepy at my desk during the afternoons.

I have no real solution for the hot months anymore, as Awair has basically abandoned the units I was using. I've just had some Zigbee air quality monitors arrive that I ordered on Aliexpress, but I'm skeptical at how accurate they'll be. Infact I'm skeptical at how accurate any of them are after I did some research into building my own and adding some sensors to an ESP32.

Going to have to try and come up with some HomeAssistant automation task with the Zigbee sensors and Ecobee to push fresh air through the house.


I went with Ecobees mainly because they offer the easy export of your data and have an open API to interop with.

I originally planned to use my HomeAssistant install to orchestrate it a little with the Awair products I have, for example, turn the AC fan on if the co2 starts getting high to flush the air, but a while ago the Ecobee app can pair up with Awair itself, so I've had no need.


Disney now have exactly what you described in your first project as a photo opportunity at the Magic Kingdom.

https://disneyparks.disney.go.com/blog/2019/05/enjoy-new-dis...


Nice! Thanks for the link. Our goal was to hit a cool shot a mile away on a target in the middle of a giant concert for a "I was there!" memento shot. Good to see it in practice somewhere.

Unfortunately the sales team didn't understand it, and what sales team doesn't understand sales team doesn't sell.

...I'm very happily in another company that gets tech - but man I wish we could have sold that project. The effect was really cool when we had it working fine.


2 Pis for dealing with ADS-B (airplane data), one for 1090Mhz, the other for 978Mhz. I could run that on the same one, but seemed easier to just split them up given some of the software is a bit picky with device IDs. The 978Mhz is much quieter than the 1090Mhz, so I also run a private SpyServer (https://github.com/lloydpick/docker-spyserver) for listening to radio transmissions.

1 Raspberry Pi for a running a very stupid sitcom sound thing. Using a camera it tries to recognise who you are, then play a random sound assigned to you out of a little speaker. Think of like the cheering/clapping when a guest or celebrity enters the room in a sitcom tv show, and replace out the clapping with whatever sound you want.


This reminds me of this project I saw on twitter a while ago where a small arduino with a motion sensor would play the Seinfeld bass riff every time someone entered a room.


Love the sitcom sound thing!


Me too. I've always though I and my friends should all have individual theme songs that play when they enter the room. Now I have another weekend project...


What do you use for receiving the radio traffice, something like an RTL-SDR, or something else?


For the ASD-B traffic I use the FlightAware USB dongles - https://flightaware.com/adsb/prostick/

And for the general radio, I use the RTL-SDR Blog USB dongle - https://www.amazon.com/RTL-SDR-Blog-RTL2832U-Software-Telesc...


Why do you listen to all these radio transmissions?


For the airplane data, I always liked browsing sites like flightradar24, planefinder etc, and wondered how they aggregated the data, and it sort of just went from there. I also now send the ADS-B data to open projects rather than commercial only entities.

In terms of the random radio transmissions, it was simply because I was already installing the two ADS-B antennas in my attic, and thought I might as well just put up the standard telescopic antenna that came with the USB receivers as well. I'm a newbie in terms of radio, so it's just been interesting scanning the bands to see what you can find and listen to.

A future project I have is to try and pick up the 443Mhz transmission from a really simple weather/temperature sensor I got from Walmart a while ago, since apparently that's what it uses to talk to the little base station it came with.


I'm only familiar with the commerical ones (flightaware etc.). What are some of the open ones?



You don't have to run the tests if you don't want, the tool has a different state for when you don't have them "ok_no_test". For some backups we run through Uphold we have written some very basic ones, like looking for the existence of some specific users, or that a table has X number of rows, which are very good for quick sanity tests.


It supports MongoDB, MySQL and PostgreSQL at the moment. It's really easy to add extra engines, you can even write your own custom ones and include them. But it's mainly dealing with full dumps, rather than volume snapshots or incrementals. That said, there's nothing to stop an "engine" being written that could create an EC2 machine using Packer and attaching an EBS volume and then testing that.

I have plans to support things like RDS as well in the longer term.

I've got some redis instances here that I can test restoring from, so could look at adding that.


We transfer our backups to S3, so there's always a chance that it could be corrupted during transfer, or that the compression could have failed before transfer.

It can also help catch operational changes, eg. someone changed the root password and updated the apps that depend upon it, but didn't adjust the backup scripts.


I created this tool a while ago, but since it's apparently world backup day I thought it a good time to submit it here. It was created out of the fact that we run automated backups of our various databases, yet we very rarely attempted a restore. This allows me to know for sure that the backup was created and that it's available, accessible & restorable. You can then if you want to, programmatically test the contents of the database using RSpec, just so that you make sure you aren't backing up the wrong one inside. So now we have the backup rubygem (https://github.com/backup/backup) triggering Uphold to fully test the backup after it's finished being made through the API.


This is a really cool project, thanks for sharing it. One of the challenges I've faced as part of the movement to a devops workflow/culture is verifying DB backups. This could speed up the process extensively. Cheers man!


Very cool. Ever thought about including default test suites with the tool? E.g. I have multiple nightly backups of Drupal databases and could think of some obvious default tests against the core tables that would be useful for all of them.


Sure, if you PR some example tests in I can make that happen.


I'll look in to it. I have never used Docker or Ruby but RSpec looks pretty straight forward from a quick scan.


Even if you just write the SQL I can translate it into RSpec if it'll save you time.


do you have a tool that does this translation or is the tool your brain? :)


I would love this to be working with 3rd party backup tools such as barman or pgbackman.


Not a web game, but The Swapper has similar mechanics - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Swapper


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