Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | mp3tricord's comments login

In a production data base why are people executing long running queries on the primary. They should be using a DB replica.


Emotient - San Diego (Full Time / On Site) http://emotient.com/

Hiring cloud ops (AWS mostly / onsite massive GPU cluster). Hiring C/C++ backend SDK development (ML background)

Our dev team is python/angular and our research team is C/C++/Matlab. Located near the UTC mall.

Emotient is the leader in emotion detection and sentiment analysis based on facial expressions. The company is at the vanguard of a new wave of emotion analysis that will lead to a quantum leap in customer understanding and emotion-aware computing.

http://emotient.com/about/careers/


I don't know about this. However you could always use the pay.reddit.com hostname eg. https://pay.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/2c99dy/snowdens_...

Been using pay.reddit.com for a while now


Can someone explain to my why its an advantage to live in a state with zero income tax? Does it really matter how the state makes its money. If it does not come from your paycheck directly they get it other ways.

For instance in Florida you pay ~2% property tax on your assessed value and in california you pay ~1% on your purchased value. If you bought property at 500k and its appreciated to 1 million in CA you pay 5k in FL you pay 20k.


The advantage is for high income people, of course. If you make alot of money (or have alot of retirement income coming in) florida kicks ass.

As a simple example:

If you make 1 million a year and live in a 2 million dollar house.

Property tax in Cali : 20k Income tax in Cali : ~65k

Property tax in FL : 40k Income tax in FL: Zero

So in this example, you are 100% better off being in florida.


Do you know a lot of people who earn $1 million/year and live in a $2 million house? A 2:1 home value:income ratio is extremely low.


> If you make 1 million a year and live in a 2 million dollar house. > Property tax in Cali : 20k Income tax in Cali : ~65k

Only 65k taxes on 1 million in income? In California? I'll pay you to do my taxes.


That's for state tax only - federal would be another good chunk on top of that - but yeah, assuming that's all straight-up income (not investments or anything), just the state-level taxes should be about 100k at California's current rates.


You dont pay state income tax on money you pay to the federal gov. Surprised how few people know that.

So on 1m you will pay ~350k to the fed gov- That leaves you with 650k 'net' remaining. CA taxes you on this amount. Hence the 65k for Cali.


I thought USA had low taxes compared to Europe but wtf property taxes


Sure, but consider that the majority of people in SF/SV are priced out of the market and are instead renters -- they're getting the worst of both worlds.


But the additional property tax is already built into your rent price and increases?


The point is that as a non-homeowner, you don't pay property tax so you don't benefit from low property tax rates. Instead you're paying rent that's among the highest in the nation. And your salary, which better be large to deal with the outrageous rent, is being taxed at one one of the highest rates in the country. It's the absolute worst tax situation to be in.


Generally inputs are priced into market price. So as a renter, I suspect I benefit from low property taxes.


State sales tax in FLA is %6 currently. Obviously it varies by jurisdiction but thats a pretty good rate for the US. Sales tax == VAT in the EU


San Francisco/CA is 9%


the point is you're paying %9 sales tax AAND state income tax. Fla is paying %6 sales tax.

Also you have to live in CA. And in SF. Double whammy.


Chicago/Cook County: 10%

I don't even get a decent startup scene for that.


You also can deduct your state taxes on your federal tax return, further lessening that burden.


You assume both states ultimately take in the same amount of money, which is false. California just takes more money from its residents. Florida isn't 'hiding it' in other taxes.


Really? Some quick searching around shows a similar amount of spending per capita.


Once memory goes to swap you already lost. Personally I rarely configure swap on servers, save the DB. I would reconfigure your services to not grow past physical free memory. After that you are going to have to scale servers horizontally.


There are a couple reason you might exercise you options.

First is that options come in two flavors ISO and NSO (or Non-Qualified). If you are issues ISO options then you could exercise and hold to qualify for long-term capital gains.

http://www.startupcompanylawyer.com/2008/03/05/whats-the-dif...

2. Your options are going to expire and you need to convert them to shares.

3. You are leaving and want to hold on to your shares. Typically you need to convert them within 3 months.


Looks like Python got something similar to Perl's LWP https://metacpan.org/module/LWP


I think LWP is more equivalent to Python's urllib2 (ie. both big beasts!). So this i believe is closer to what LWP::UserAgent (https://metacpan.org/module/LWP::UserAgent) does.

Also check out Mojo::UserAgent (https://metacpan.org/module/Mojo::UserAgent) for a nice(er) alternative. And don't forget that Perl now comes a nice lightweight alternative as standard: https://metacpan.org/module/HTTP::Tiny


Yes gp, LWP::UserAgent specifically. Never knew about HTTP::Tiny thanks.. I'll check it out.


Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: