maninekkalapudi.io
Plays with data and code. Data Engineer and infra enthusiast
Socials: linktr.ee/maninekkalapudi
482 posts
285 followers
604 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
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We should definitely explore torrenting as an option
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Thank you 🙏
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www.foundationdb.org/files/fdb-pa...
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Link please! 🙏
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🤣
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Yep! Indian summers can really test the limits of human survival limits. Getting worse every year!
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Being from India (a tropical country), this picture is giving me chills just by looking at it 😅
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Yo! Wut!?😨🥶
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Yep. They have KSQL DB for the similar purpose.
There was a discussion in the past on removing OLTP databases completely in favour of it. In hindsight it looked too idiotic because they both serve very different purposes!
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Wow! That's Wilbur! Finally met him.
I give full marks for naming a database on behalf of his kind 👏
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Wilbur!?
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We had MPPs available and yet MR was favored because of the extensibility it brings to processing diverse data
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Book: Designing Data Intensive Applications by Martin Kleppmann
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It's the tail for the ages and centuries to comes!
Pouring one for the data team!🍷
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That this most unhealthy amount of data tools I have seen that are hacked to "get something done"
Do they even bother to check if all of this could be done in Python first and ingest it to A BI tool?
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Donut chats. Should be banned from existence
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True. The base human behaviour is more or less the same for a long time. We use our collective intelligence and patterns to work around that.
I just let my thoughts run wild for no apparent reason at all
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Oh 😱 This is some revelation to me!
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Actually I got it in the first try and with the first solution last week but I didn't trust myself with the answer 🤷🤷🤷🤦🤦🤦
Why do I do this to myself !?
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I was just trying to throw all sorts of solutions towards the issue and not the answer
Gave up on it completely. Took a power nap in the afternoon to avoid frustration and dissapointment.
It took me 2 mins to think right and I got the answer out of the blue!🤦
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Book: Designing Data Intensive Applications by Martin Kleppmann
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Oh! I thought best way to code is through AI software engineers
And best database is the one Oracle recommended
What changed?
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Yeah, I'm for developing technology for reliability than constant flood of useless updates
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And the iPhone, from what I heard is going on a troubled path with recent updates!
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Yeah. I mean that we are treating tech as a very volatile entity prone to constant change.
I'm always thinking about "mission critical" systems like an airplane. It's great that we systems like these to rely on
OTOH, we have a constant flood of updates to justify the existence of the products
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Thank you!
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OLAP system*
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YES! It should be "OLAP"
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As of late, I'm feeling were in the "enshittification" phase where we just force useless tech iterations down the user throats.
Back to original question, Has any piece of tech ever solved a problem (maybe continue to do so) permanently without reinventing itself everytime?🤔
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Most of the times, the tech had to evolve because of societal changes thus redefining a lot of things along the way. I believe this has lead to mindless (mostly) "upgrade to new and discard old"
For example: buying a "smart" home product
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Paper Link: www.cidrdb.org/cidr2024/pap...
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One active area of research for MotherDuck is caching the data locally and serve fresh data. It could be very interesting how it can be implemented for large datasets in the future