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No definitely not true. It was in Source Depot if not SLM.


100% this

I noted below that I have recently moved from US to Australia

The Chinese cars are taking over here: it’s a product people want at a price they like

GM wants to monetize yesterday’s market, and are just going to fall farther behind.

When these cars eventually come in, EV mandate or not, the US car companies will get crushed


> The Chinese cars are taking over here: it’s a product people want at a price they like

If you can hazard a guess, which make and model is the “Tesla killer” for EVs, if such a car exists.

I frequently suggest to folks in the US (where I’m from) that BYDs in the US would change the competitive landscape, but I can’t reliably point to a make/model or two that they can check out online.


Honestly sort of all of them.

The Seal looks almost exactly like a Model 3 with better range Atto/Sealion are the SUV shapes that barely exist as EVs in US (Equinox maybe)


I have recently moved from US to Australia and it is 100% clear to me the US automakers will get absolutely crushed by the Chinese companies if/when they are able to access US market.

Especially EVs and PHEVs. This place is awash with them, they are cars people want at the right price.


This is the best comment I have ever seen on HN. Nailed it


This has been a concern for me too. But the agent is just a statsd receiver with some extra magic, so this seems like a thing that could be solved with the collector sending traffic to an agent rather than the HTTP APIs?

I looked at the OTel DD stuff and did not see any support for this, fwiw, maybe it doesn't work b/c the agent expects more context from the pod (e.g. app and label?)


Yeah, the DD agent and the otel-collector DD exporter actually use the same code paths for the most part. The relevant difference tends to be in metrics, where the official path involves the DD agent doing collection directly, for example, collecting redis metrics by giving the agent your redis database hostname and creds. It can then pack those into the specific shape that DD knows about and they get sent with the right name, values, etc so that DD calls them regular metrics.

If you instead went the more flexible route of using many of the de-facto standard prometheus exporters like the one for redis, or built-in prometheus metrics from something like istio, and forward those to your agent or configure your agent to poll those prometheus metrics, it won't do any reshaping (which I can see the arguments for, kinda, knowing a bit about their backend) and they just end up in the DD backend as custom metrics, and charge you at $0.10/mo per 100 time series. If you've used prometheus before for any realistic deployments with enrichment etc, you can probably see this gets expensive ridiculously fast.

What I wish they'd do instead is have some form of adapter from those de facto standards, so I can still collect metrics 99% my own way, in a portable fashion, and then add DD as my backend without ending up as custom everything, costing significantly more.


Temporal is designed for industrial strength flows and scale. For example an HTTP based push mechanism can overload workers hence the queue.

And its jusr code so not sure about the DSL reference (of course thats common with other systems)?

What use cases is this designed for? Easier to learn and build usually has tradeoffs


Inngest has built in concurrency controls and rate limiting to prevent systems from being overloaded, allowing the user to have the same controls of a traditional worker, but just a simple config option.

Inngest was designed to be a solution that can replace traditional queuing systems and event driven systems. Originally, it was built with the idea to handle complex flows that need to be durable, e.g. healthcare workflows that have time-based follow ups and legal compliance tasks that need to be executed in a specific order depending on patient confirmation or other actions.

We've seen users build all sorts of things: automate infrastructure based on events, building AI Agents around LLMs, perform vulnerability scans across thousands of packages, building scheduling products, and e-commerce data pipelines. We're seeing new use cases each week.


This seems very similar to Secret [1]? IIRC there were some competitive apps at the time, YikYak maybe?

Secret sounded scandalous, and maybe that was the goal, but it actually did a really great job of anonymous Q&A, and was full of posts from people saying "I have this private/odd/embarrassing situation what should I do", and more often then not the thread contained some really insightful and thoughtful stuff.

I was disappointed when it shut down, is the idea of this to be similar?

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_(app)


OK well then, we'd better not do anything about it! <s/>

I don't think this is strictly true. Oil production is not fully fungible due to all kinds of issues including sanctions and production capacity.

But this is also a strawman - this isn't saying "we should shut them all down" or even begging that question.

At a minimum it's saying "there were people and companies who intentionally chose to mislead the public on a potentially existential issue - perhaps there should be some reckoning for that?"


https://www.aei.org/economics/environmental-energy-economics...

I never said don't do anything.

What I believe is that we need to balance carbon elimination w/ carbon mitigation and not put all our eggs in the elimination basket.

We've got one chance to do this right.


I suspect we had one chance to do it right, but the organised and widespread suppression and misinformation campaigns of these companies basically made that impossible.

Now we're faced with a range of unpalatable choices and a population fiercely divided about what to do.

Great job oil companies.


This is a common but erroneous thinking. Man influenced climate change is an ongoing process.

It would have been great to start doing something thirty years ago to avoid some of what’s happening now but we didn’t. Now we still have to do something or it will get even worse.

This is not a throw your arms in the air and wait for the end while screaming situation.


Not advocating throwing my hands in the air, but the deliberate delay has narrowed our choices at a rate faster than technology has come to the rescue.

There is going to be a lot of complaints as choices keep getting removed and decisions forced upon us by the escalating crisis. If you are a freedom loving libertarian, you are not going to enjoy the next few decades. Which would be deliciously ironic if it wasn't such a monstrous tragedy.


I’m not sure I agree with this take.

What we are starting to meaningfully see, at least in Europe, is regulations which actually have teeth regarding where investments go and what companies can do regarding emissions and sustainability.

It means some things are going to either get more expensive or downright disappear but I wouldn’t call that a significant curb on freedom.

It’s more akin to not being able to use lead in plumbing than living under an authoritarian regime. Sure there will be less meat on the menu but, well, c’est la vie.


Hard disagree. We are well beyond the point where farting around on the edges of consumer behaviour can ever make a dent in reversing climate change.

Blaming consumers buys into the big emitters disinformation campaigns. Its not our fault.

The big emitters need to be curbed hard and fast. Our governments so far have been unwilling, complicit or unable to do so.

Its going to require a mass, popular movement to shut down coal mining worldwide, to restrict air travel, to localise food production and reinvigorate ground based mass transit. Nobody can make that happen as individuals at the checkout.


I don’t really see how that’s a hard disagree.

European regulations are not oriented towards consumers nor are they “farting around”.

These are far reaching regulations on investments. They impact literally everything. It’s going to be hard to do something if you can’t get money to do it.

But these are not hard choices or libertarian hell. That’s just a bit more regulations.

Sure, mining coal won’t be profitable anymore, people won’t be able to buy diesel cars and both flying and meat will become more expensive. It’s definitely a shift in how people live and probably a downgrade in some aspect regarding quality of life. But it’s a relatively painless one.


We followed the book The Contented Little Baby Book for our kids. Others recommended to us and sleep has never been a problem after a few months old.

Kids thrive with structure but it takes discipline to maintain consistency.

It’s not magic, in a nutshell it just makes sure your kids have a very reliable routine and they are never super tired or super hungry.

Goodness springs from there.


I worked at a large valley based company that had their own data centers and badly wanted to decrease infra spend.

It's WAY harder than it sounds.

Remember Twitter is not a profitable company which means the likelihood of a bunch of low-hanging fruit for savings is very low. That's been done already.

There are not likely "oh look we found a whole DC sitting idle, oops" sort of savings. Any vendors they use are ALREADY giving them huge discounts.

I'm not saying Twitter is efficient or that this is physically impossible (tho it might be), I'm saying its not easy and takes skilled people a long time to iterate to lower-cost systems or designs that don't have massive stability or performance tradeoffs.


All of what you say is speculation. In reality there might be a huge amount of waste where it's just become an accustomed part of the culture <- also speculation.


> Remember Twitter is not a profitable company which means the likelihood of a bunch of low-hanging fruit for savings is very low.

That's circular. Their revenue is astronomical. They're not profitable because they're spending it all. That doesn't mean there aren't plenty of low hanging opportunities (or that there are).

Hidden recordings of twitter staff had the describing the places as more of a lifestyle business where profit isn't a major goal and many people worked very limited amounts. It could have been useless bluster but if there was any basis to it, it's a good indication that massive savings should be possible.


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