Same. Love PlanetScale, love their previous website design. I struggle reading white text on black backgrounds, so I don't even try to read their product pages or blog posts since there's no light mode :( yes I know about reader mode
It feels it went from "professional Stripe level design that you admire and it inspires you" to just "hard to read black website", not sure what for.
There's definitely a light mode for planetscale.com (the docs, the blog, the changelog, and the UI). Should work on both desktop and mobile. Make sure your browser is requesting light mode. The browser doesn't always follow your OS-level preferences.
https://instances.vantage.sh/ recently added alerts for any pricing changes on EC2, including newly launching new instances. The site rebuilds every 4 hours so it usually breaks the pricing news first. I have it on for myself and its super helpful just to see when AWS changes things.
[Disclaimer, I'm CEO of Vantage - the company that maintains the site]
[Not a sales pitch - just answering the questions]
This AWS EC2 site is just an open-source project and site we maintain for the benefit of the community. So it's not directly our business but it promotes our brand and is just a helpful site that I think should exist. It's very popular and has been around for about 15 years now.
Our main business hosted on the main domain of https://www.vantage.sh/ is around cloud cost management across 25 different providers (AWS, Azure, Datadog, OpenAI, Anthropic, etc) and the use-cases there about carving up one bill and showing specific costs back to engineers for them to be held accountable to, take action on, etc. Cloud costs and their impact on companies' margins is a big enough problem for vendors like us to exist and we're one player in a larger market.
FYI, it's been almost two years since us-east-1-chi-2 launched and it's still missing on the site. Any reason for this? Kind of feels like local zones are a 2nd class citizen even at AWS itself.
Thank you for maintaining this, I do use it every few months at $DAYJOB and it's quite useful for my capacity/deployment planning.
Huh...weird. I just looked into this and we do have us-east-1-chi-1....but not chi-2. It appears that chi-2 isn't being returned at all as part of the bulk pricing API from AWS for some reason. We'll see if we can dig deeper on why that's the case but just wanted to let you know that's the root issue from our end.
Hey, big fan of the vantage instance finder. Would it be possible to add instance type labels similar to what AWS calls them on their website - "storage-optimized", "general-purpose" etc.?
I find this often useful to quickly compare similar instance types, e.g.: m7g vs. m8g vs. m9g.
> They can fine all they want, if the company doesn't have any entity in said territory they can just ignore it.
Try running an online poker site abroad and serve US players and find out how that'll work out for you.
Didn't work out well for Lithuanian/Canadian/Israeli Isai Scheinberg founder of Poker Stars, nor Calvin Ayre, the founder of the Bodog, who ended up on the FBI's top 10 list. United States reportedly sought* to seize around $3 billion worth of assets from 3 major online poker companies at the time.
This is the UK we’re talking about, not the US. Watch out, they might send you a strongly worded email, then they’ll follow it up with a D-notice to prevent the media from telling everyone how you embarrassed them.
> If you show revenue, people will ask 'HOW MUCH?' and it will never be enough. The company that was the 100xer, the 1000xer is suddenly the 2x dog. But if you have NO revenue, you can say you're pre-revenue! You're a potential pure play... It's not about how much you earn, it's about how much you're worth. And who is worth the most? Companies that lose money!
I use `jsonata` currently at work. I think it's excellent. There's even a limited-functionality rustlib (https://github.com/Stedi/jsonata-rs). What I particularly like about `jsonata` is its support for variables, they're super useful in a pinch when a pure expression becomes ugly or unwieldy or redundant. It also lets you "bring your own functions", which lets you do things like:
```
$sum($myArrayExtractor($.context))
```
where `$myArrayExtractor` is your custom code.
---
Re: "how did it go"
We had a situation where we needed to generate EDI from json objects, which routinely required us to make small tweaks to data, combine data, loop over data, etc. JSONata provided a backend framework for data transformations that reduced the scope and complexity of the project drastically.
I think JSONata is an excellent fit for situations where companies need to do data transforms, for example when it's for the sake of integrations from 3rd-party sources; all the data is there, it just needs to be mapped. Instead of having potentially buggy code as integration, you can have a pseudo-declarative jsonata spec that describes the transform for each integration source, and then just keep a single unified "JSONata runner" as the integration handler.
It's nice because we can just put the JSONata expression into a db field, and so you can have arbitrary data transforms for different customers for different data structures coming or going, and they can be set up just by editing the expression via the site, without having to worry about sandboxing it (other than resource exhaustion for recursive loops). It really sped up the iteration process for configuring transforms.
- It might take time for your eyes to adjust.
- No matter how good the screen resolution is, you'll see pixelated reality rendered. Luckily Mac extended screen resolution is quite impressive and better than the live video of the room around you.
- Keep your eyes healthy, try to remember to take off the device often and go check your eye sight, especially after first few months.
- It might not work for you like it works for me (YMMV).
> Hate to break it to you, but many kids actually do better away from their parents than with them.
Is this based on something?
There's research left and right shows that children under 36 months at group nurseries are linked to increased aggression, anxiety, lower emotional skills, elevated cortisol (stress hormone), which is associated with long-term health and developmental risks.
Infants and children do better with one-to-one care at home by their parents and familiar faces, rather than strangers in a group setting.
But generally, I think best bet is to offload such things to e.g. Lambda per tenant.