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anyone know how to sign up for participation in the pilot and/or the eventual wider rollout?


whats the Google Cloud (first-party) managed mail service for personal domains?


I'd also prefer not to have to transfer my domain over to Google.


Is there a preliminary Table of Contents available?


have they not seen 2001? https://youtu.be/1s-PiIbzbhw


"Open the pod bay door HAL." "I'm sorry Dave, I can't do that."


how does this compare to Google's Coldline storage?


The biggest difference is that Glacier is still a "suspend/resume" type of accesss. However, if you just want to compare pricin, it'll depend on your access pattern and object sizes.

Retrieval in all Google Cloud Storage is instant and for Coldline is $.05/GB (and Nearline $.01/GB). If you value that instant access, it seems the closest you'd get with the updates to Glacier is via the Expedited retrieval ($.03/GB and $.01/"request" which is per "Archive" in Glacier). Then you have to decide how much throughput you want to guarantee at $100/month for each 150MB/s. (It's naturally unclear since it was just announced what kind of best-effort throughput we're talking about without the provisioned capacity).

If you're never going to touch the bytes, and each Archive is big enough to make the 40 KB of metadata negligible then the new $.004/GB/month is a nice win over Coldline's $.007. Somewhere in between and one of the bulk/batch retrieval methods might be a better fit for you.

But again, it's still a bit of a challenge to go in and out of Glacier while Coldline (and Nearline and Standard) storage in GCS is a single, uniform API. That's worth a lot to me, and our customers. But if Glacier were a good fit for a problem you have, and you're talking about enough money to make the pain worth it, you should seriously consider it.

Disclosure: I work on Google Cloud, so naturally I'd want you to use GCS ;).


Google has a "Glacier vs Nearline" calculator, which doesn't appear to have been updated yet:

https://cloud.google.com/pricing/tco/storage-nearline

(work at Google)


I wonder how this resurrection project is coming along http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1113874-the-frightening-disc...

Also, would anyone have any good theories as to why dinosaurs evolved feathers? and from what did it evolve from? was it hair?


I believe feathers evolved from scales. I think they were first beneficial for dinosaurs for their likely elaborate courtship/mating rituals if birds are any indicator of how other dinosaurs found mates.

Early feathers weren't useful for flying, keeping warm or making a creature look bigger, so I would figure the advantage that made them useful was related to mating.



Provided they really do require authorization to perform any actions on the phone.

That would prevent anyone from modifying your phone without your permission. Such as flash the BIOS or something more malicious. Again provided authorization is required to perform those actions.


Engineers are not immune to such wage-fixing practices

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-Tech_Employee_Antitrust_L...

even family-oriented companies like Pixar worked against their employees

http://www.cartoonbrew.com/artist-rights/animation-wage-fixi...


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