Take a look at quickwit. Its basically a clone of elasticsearch but in rust.
I have around 380 TBs of logs currently in s3 and have sub 1s searches for needle in the haystack searches. It handles all that with just 5 search nodes running on kubernetes with 6gig of RAM each.
its a lot of warm moisture that comes up the coast from the southeast and slams into cold air from canada and can drop a lot of snow/wind. It can cause bad storms in the ocean and high seas.
I'm not sure if you read the post, but with some of the new cheating tools that exist, they overlay the GPT responses in front of your screen with concise bullet points. You wouldn't even need to look away from your screen or interviewer to cheat. The bullet points are also small enough to where it is incredibly difficult to tell that someone is reading anything - even if they have a webcam enabled and are looking right at you. This, coupled with some interviewers that don't care a lot about the process, it is getting easier for cheaters to slip into places for sure!
noticed you mentioned speed.. That's probably why you are going through tires so fast.. ya EVs go through tires a lot faster but if you drive fast and more so accelerate fast then you will really go through tires
How much ongoing development is needed for something like this? I've been using synergy/barrier for years and the features I need have changed barely if at all during that time. Seems like a prime candidate for "finished" software.
Mostly finished. However, these software take advantage of the accessibility features of each OS to emulate mouse and keyboard input. Clipboard access is also required. So as each OS changes the requirements to access those features, someone has to keep updating the software for that.
Synergy doesn't work on Wayland, so I can't use it on Fedora anymore (unless I switch it back to X).
There's always new feature requests. Drag and Drop files is a common one. I personally think that's scope creep, but I can see the appeal. Synergy and barrier already establish an encrypted connection between machines, so copying a file seems a good fit. At very least a "Synergy send to ${computer}" share/send to option would make sense.
Here's Synergy's roadmap, and since Synergy and Barrier are the commercial/open-source fork of the same ancestor, Barrier probably has received similiar requests over time.
Would a heat pump work? 8 mini-splits sounds like way too. Mini-splits are also the cheaper option, surprised they cost $10k. A heat pump in my area wouldn't be too much more than $10k (excluding duct work).
> But still more expensive than gas in most areas?
Using numbers from the non-profit Efficiency Maine, with natural/methane gas at $2.561 per CCF (therm), and electricity at $0.1595 per kWh, standard efficiency heat pumps have better $/MMBtu down to about 0F/-18C, and high performance HPs down to about -10F/-25C, per this presentation:
Generally: if you're buying new HVAC+D equipment for your home, you might as well buy a heat pump instead of a 'simple' AC unit, and there are heat pumps that can work down below freezing quite well (which is probably good enough for most of the US population, except in the coldest locations).
i would say if you have a gas HVAC there is little point in replacing unless you also have a lot of solar on the roof and sending a lot back to the grid.
If I was building a new home today and in an area that might get down to 10-15F as a low i'd 100% do heat pumps. The nice part about heat pumps for me is that they might get to temp and run at 10% all day long and keep the heat right at 71. Where a gas will turn on at 69 and heat till 73 and continue that cold/hot cycle
being cheaper also depends on current utility rates also
I have around 380 TBs of logs currently in s3 and have sub 1s searches for needle in the haystack searches. It handles all that with just 5 search nodes running on kubernetes with 6gig of RAM each.
I'm ingesting around 20TBs of logs a day on it.