If anyone has doubts about this, check out this map in another article on this site, it's second map in this article and it has this title under it:
"Potential Side Effects of a 100% Tariff"
We didn’t replace all servers at once, it was progressive, therefore due to availability the models we used changed over time.
Our first batch of all nvme machines had SSDPE2KX080T8, they became harder to source and we moved to SSDPF2KX076T1.
With Intel no longer in the ssd business I believe we have some Micron MTFDKCC7T6TGH and MTFDKCC30T7TGR. And as mentioned in the blog post we've recently purchased some Solidigm D5-P5336 which are 61TB monsters.
Here's a fun related story. Our supplier had so much trouble finding SSDPE2KX080T8 that when we had exhausted our spares, I had to sync everything off a machine, tear it down and pull its drives for spares and rebuild it with the smaller SSDPF2KX076T1. Then we had lots of spares
"Notification Remover" Android app allows to automatically dismiss some notifications but not others, based on user-defined filters. I use it and it works really well.
"Notifications will be cleaned automatically based on your input. Select the package name of an app and enter the message text (regular expression) of the annoying notification and you'll never see it again."
It however lacks ability to export / import filters so they need to be created manually.
Also the app is not longer updated. I hope at some point somebody will create open-source clone of it with more features.
How is this different from what's built-in to Android? You can silence notifications from individual apps, set 'Do Not Disturb' times and, with quite a few apps, you can even fine-tune which kind of notifications it's allowed to send you.
This app doesn't work on an app level, it works on a message or notification level.
E.g I want uber to tell me when food or my driver is arriving, but I want them to fuck off from spamming me about discounts or other nonsense. This app allows me to keep for the former but block the latter.
I know you just used Uber as an eg. but, as I alluded to before, many apps [inluding Uber] allow you to fine tune what kind of notifications they are allowed to send anyway. Go under the 'Advanced' tab for App Notifications and, for Uber I get the choice to yay or nay:
"Notification Remover" Android app allows to automatically dismiss some notifications but not others, based on user-defined filters. I use it and it works really well.
"Notifications will be cleaned automatically based on your input. Select the package name of an app and enter the message text (regular expression) of the annoying notification and you'll never see it again."
It however lacks ability to export / import filters so they need to be created manually.
Also the app is not longer updated. I hope at some point somebody will create open-source clone of it with more features.
One of the first things I do when evaluating any new app is navigate to /pricing to see whether they have clear pricing. If they don't, I bounce straight out of there.
I actually am in the market for a new chat app for a company I'm building and actively researching this right now. But until you have a /pricing page I'm not going to consider your app. I'm not interested in going through the rigmarole of contacting sales to find this out.
> Predictable pricing
Fixed rate pricing means your team will always know what you’re spending on Cardinal. We’ve got plans for teams of all sizes and usage levels, from startup to enterprise
Given that you don't actually have _any_ pricing, predictable or otherwise, this is currently a total fabrication and should be removed from your website until you sort this out.
I totally get it and support your take of not signing up for a product that you can't see public pricing for. That said, no one ever said we don't have pricing. It's just not publicly listed at present because we're very early in our journey, are learning a ton about helping teams on-board, and also focusing on helping communities that are currently not well served by other pricing models.
We meant the predictable bit to be more like a promise on our part. We'll talk to you, we'll give you clear pricing once we get a good picture of what you're looking for and how we can help you, and we'll stick with it so you're not thinking about the monthly price of our service on top of another 8-12 on average that you need to add for each new team member.
All that said, I'm going to review that on the site today and find ways to clarify what we mean so that we're clearer.
Please be more clear about this in your site's "Predictable pricing" section. Google results for "site:withcardinal.com pricing" link to 404 errors at withcardinal.com/pricing - this feels misaligned with predictability. Best of luck to you!
https://maarthandam.com/2024/12/01/trumps-brics-tariff-histo...
I think it's easier to confirm usage of LLMs by images than by text.