> The notion that changes in interest rates, which generally correlate with inflation, would alter the price of stocks is not obvious to me. Not sure what mechanism you would propose that would cause that to happen.
Higher rates -> reduced accessibility of personal credit -> lower spending -> lower corporate revenue -> higher cost of borrowing -> higher cost of debt service -> lower profits -> stock price
Rates act as a global parameter that impacts performance of companies differently, with the consensus understanding that it impacts debt-fuelled (or what we now usually call growth) companies the most.
This. As bond rates rise capital moves out of stocks over to bonds. Bonds are higher in the capital structure as well. When bond rates go absurdly low capital moves into stocks (as we have seen).
Doesn't matter. People don't invest exclusively in one of stocks or bonds, but diversify. A higher interest rate might make bonds slightly more attractive on a continuum.
You could easily observe this with a cache-cold query performing lots of random IO. EBS latency is on the order of milliseconds, even cheap baremetal nowadays is microseconds
Also rds caps out around 20k IOPS. You can hit 1 million IOPS on a large machine with a bunch of SSDs. Imagine running 50 rds databases instead of 1.
It's a huge bummer that EBS is the only durable block storage in aws since the performance is so bad. Has anyone had luck using instance storage? The aws white papers make it seem like you could lose data there for any number of reasons, but the performance is so much better. Maybe a synchronous replica in a different AZ?
I've used Aurora and the IO is much better there than on vanilla RDS. Postgres Aurora is basically a fork of postgres with a totally different storage system. Their are some neat re:Invent talks on it if you are interested.
We use aurora actually. It's a lot more scalable, but also pretty expensive. The IO layer is multi-tenent, and unfortunately when it goes wrong, you have no idea why and no recourse. I think I've never had a positive experience with AWS support about it either. We've had IO latency go from <2ms to >10ms and completely destroy throughput. Support tells us to try optimizing our queries like we are idiots.
Clearly written by an applicant rather than employer. Your resume is your chance to shine, use the opportunity or pay a service to do it for you.
The reason the author is trapped long enough in meat grinder hiring to notice this "problem" is likely precisely because of some indistinguishable cookie cutter bullet point soup getting them nowhere. If you can capture it in a data structure, it's not a resume!
See also: why isn't there a universal UI for web sites?
CloudFlare's stock price changes are related to narratives from the past 2 years rapidly fading, like the retail investing world finally learning what a CDN did right at the start of COVID, and expectations of the interest rate environment shifting. AFAIK there has been no material news to justify what's happening to its stock recently, other than many large players rushing to exit extremely crowded trades they all had in common.
There is currently a widespread fear that quantitative tightening could arrive very rapidly, with disastrous effects on high multiplier tech stocks and other debt-fuelled businesses. They've all been getting hammered in uniform since at least December.
I built out my first ISP in 2001, worked in FAANG by 2006, haven't the slightest comprehension of what this is for. Is it some kind of certified partner directory?
This is a list of "things" in the cloud native space. Some of them are from CNCF members and some aren't. Some are paid products and services while other things are entirely free and open source.
Many (most?) of the things are tied to organizations and they try to show information on those organizations.
The CNCF doesn't have certified partners. It is a sub-foundation of the Linux Foundation and a non-profit. The CNCF does have members. Some of them are vendors and some are end users. Things listed in the landscape don't need to be from a member.
Definitely concur. In a well designed language, I'd expect it to be possible to express something a bit closer to C++'s ios but without the crazy verbosity, and without switching mode. It's not that general language features like this aren't possible, it's often that they simply haven't been discovered yet. User-defined literals are a recent concept that helps eliminate some crap in a related area.
Meanwhile, can't complain all that much if zero-cost features can be added to Rust to make it easier to market it to scripting folk. I think that can only be a good thing, even if the feature design is far from ideal.
> Interesting how one might choose to their faith over their life.
The belief in the right to a predictably long life is a new idea barely a few centuries old at most. Not that I'm personally complaining, but the statement did make me think, the value of living longer for everyone is not self-evident (at least from where I am standing), and the presumption that it is seems in itself dogmatic.
Actually, I could suggest a few non-faith approaches to rationalize the benefit of early death
> [T]he value of living longer for everyone is not self-evident (at least from where I am standing), and the presumption that it is seems in itself dogmatic.
That's only part of it, the major problem with classic UUIDs are that writes occur randomly across the entire keyspace. Whether it's represented as a string or in binary, ordering does not change, and so the underlying indexing method must cope with these random orderings at insertion time.
At least btrees perform much worse with random insertions. I don't know how much impact it has on LSM
LSMs and fractal trees handle random inserts much better. But you still lose locality of lookups: items generated near each other time-wise are not correlated on disk.
Higher rates -> reduced accessibility of personal credit -> lower spending -> lower corporate revenue -> higher cost of borrowing -> higher cost of debt service -> lower profits -> stock price
Rates act as a global parameter that impacts performance of companies differently, with the consensus understanding that it impacts debt-fuelled (or what we now usually call growth) companies the most.