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Google the name of the person you're replying to :)


Google twenty one pilots lore explained. There's few hours worth of videos on the topic :)


Hope im not misunderstanding, but have you checked gearman? While I haven't used it personally, ive used similar thing but in c#, namely hangfire.


I just tried this.. It's a bit more lazy than chatgpt 3.5/4 which sometimes go ahead and translate a Go file to C# in full. Most times they omit most of the logic because "it's too complex" "it would require extensive resources". Phind is no different, but it entirely refuses to do entire code translation.

https://www.phind.com/agent?cache=clsxrt4200001jp08wwi55rm1


Same experience, it refuses to provide any implementation details in some cases, like GPT-4.


want != bet your life on them


Exactly; people would like their databases to be correct and consistent, but generally don't care enough to actually do something like hiring someone like Kyle to verify it before buying a database. They just find something with the right features and performance, and go ahead and use it. You see a lot of them in this thread; people who used RavenDB for a while, and then had to migrate away because of issues. If the business actually cared enough about consistency, there would have been some kind of validation and verification before selecting a database.


In the .net world, we have a namespace called System.IO, that houses cross platform implementations of functions to work with directories, files, searching for files, can't we just have a standard js library in the same spirit, than try to half ass emulate a shell just so someone can run rm - rf. All of this seems extremely unnecessary and a wasted time and energy to solving the wrong problem.


The article starts by mentioning the programmatic interfaces, but the point here is to be better able to write quick, clear scripts, not full programs.

It's solving a -different- problem, and it may not be a problem that you personally have, but as I think the various excited comments rather demonstrate, it absolutely -is- a problem plenty of people -do- have and it's a really nice thing to have available for us.


There are so many minor (sometimes major) differences in how even macos(zsh/bash) and linux (bash) works, let alone windows (cmd, powershell)

A layer that abstracts these differences can be very useful for buildng CLI's and just apps with javscsript.


I have hetzner vms going on 500+ DAYS without restart. I've been a hetzner customer for about 8 years now. Aws has been down x10 times more than hetzner has. And even when hetzner has issues they are localized to a single DC at worst, most often a single host is down. When aws has issue.. The whole internet has issues. Or their central region goes out, also can affect their other regions.

For the small/medium businesses infra I manage here in bulgaria , the same thing would cost 5-10 times as much on aws just for the compute, throw in 1tb of bandwidth.. And this makes no financial sense.

On hetzner I pay 40 euros for 2 vms, dedicated ips, daily backups, 100gb of ssd external storage, and firewall.


I have more than 10 servers on Hetzner (some dedicated, some VPS), for 5+ years and the same experience, once one of the dedicated servers had some hardware issues, and an hour later the drives were moved to another box and it was running again. Other than that time, I had downtime only because of my own fault.

Pretty sure over these years AWS has experienced a lot more issues overall.


AI As a Service ( AAaS ), Then the Marketplace of GPTs, and it will become the place to get your AI features from.


Interesting tidbit.. DC mentions he's using 96 core Thread Ripper.. which got announced 1 day before the release of the video.


I caught that too! It's either he got an early proc since he's Dave Cutler (see his other mentions of AMD in the talk) or he confused it with EPYC. Considering he mentioned he has two machines, the other 64-core and how AMD approached him before on 64-bit and all.. I'd venture to guess he got in early.


Imagine I was one of those people that their DNA got leaked. How would that could/would/will affect me?

And please, don't say "insurance companies would love that data!".


You'll get to experience the bottom percentile of Hacker News posting endlessly about how getting a cheap genetic test in the mid-2010s was obviously something only a total moron would do, and occasionally slipping in an "insurance companies would love that data!" (I'm not saying it, use-mention distinction) alongside it.

Your raw data hasn't leaked unless it was your account in particular that got used, but you could be put on some guy's "Jew list", which you may or may not care about.


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