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sarker

It isn't happening, and if it is, it's a bad thing

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joined 2022 September 05 16:50:08 UTC

				

User ID: 636

sarker

It isn't happening, and if it is, it's a bad thing

0 followers   follows 0 users   joined 2022 September 05 16:50:08 UTC

					

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User ID: 636

no?

So you've got a system where you can't pay some latency for availability (I'll level with you, 250ms is an ass-pull on your part, even planet scale databases like Spanner that are way overkill for something like this can manage much better latencies, to say nothing of a simple MySQL master/replica situation), but it's totally fine if it goes down and stays down over a weekend?

If we're talking about a system where 24% uptime (aka business hours) is totally cool, yeah I guess you don't need to think about reliability, but again ive never seen a system like this so i don't know if they exist.

If we're talking about a system where uptime actually matters, it's totally unsustainable to page someone awake to do a manual fail over every time the primary shits the bed. That also comes with a cost, and it's probably bigger than a few ms of latency to make sure your database is available. Making stuff run all the time is literally what computers are for.

Yeah but you've presumably already had to solve that problem one way or another because you've (I assume?) already got a service that needs a highly available database. Surely configuring replication for MySQL isn't insurmountable for a leet haxx0r such as yourself.

People absolutely cannot resist looking at this and saying well why do that when you can have the standby take over automatically. And yes I get it that's a reasonable desire. And yes, you can do that, but that model is so much more complicated and difficult to get right.

Who's going to get paged awake at 3AM on Saturday to run a shell script to fail over to the standby? I presume there's some services out there where two or three days of downtime is fine but I don't have any experience with them.

In contrast I find it's pretty easy to set up a service with a few replicas and a load balancer with health checking in front of it so that nobody needs to be manually selecting replicas. It's not complicated and with reasonable infrastructure it's a problem you only need to solve once and use it everywhere, in contrast to hand rolling another unreliable service that's going to become somebody's operational burden.

Put another way, being a pager monkey for one unreliable service is already dumb. Doing that for ten services is just ridiculous.

for various 'born free' morons to euthanize squirrels and ferrets on their way to eliminating cats.

I couldn't find a justification for the "eliminating cats" claim on that thread.(Some) Bird people certainly want to make outdoor cats illegal, but I haven't seen anyone want to actually eliminate all cats.

Off topic, but unfortunately TNR somehow fails to reduce feral cat populations (I don't have a cite for this off the top of my head, but I read it in Cat Sense). I don't have a problem with people letting their cats out, at least in the US (although we should recognize that the density of cats in residential neighborhoods is much greater than the density of the wild felids that lived there before, so the bobcat comparison is unconvincing).

  • reversed stupidity is not intelligence
  • everyone only pushes directly to staging, but some people also have a separate prod environment

There's a theory that she did it in Montreal, right? Doubt you'd find that on ssa.gov (or want to publicize it).

They are still eligible to be paid and receive credits for early release, so it's not that they get nothing for their efforts.

I don't care much about the punishment, personally, and I'm happy to have criminals warehoused in prisons to keep them out of polite society.

Sure, in the sense that you won't be disciplined for not paying your taxes, It's just that not being in jail is a perquisite of paying your taxes, and therefore you're not actually forced to pay taxes.

Here's what the legislative analyst wrote about the prop.

People who refuse to work or do other activities can face consequences such as losing the ability to make regular phone calls.

Do you disagree that this is a concrete example of being disciplined for refusing a work assignment?

Here's the full text of the prop.

Slavery and involuntary servitude are prohibited.

(b) The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation shall not discipline any incarcerated person for refusing a work assignment.

(c) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation from awarding credits to an incarcerated person who voluntarily accepts a work assignment.

(d) Amendments made to this section by the measure adding this subdivision shall become operative on January 1, 2025.[6]

Concretely, which section here do you find objectionable?

If that one passes, I am reliably informed that most of the prison jobs will go away due to lack of funding, leaving prisoners without any options to make money.

Why? If the prisoners wish to work, they'll keep working. If the prisoners largely don't wish to work, I don't think it makes sense to make them work so that a small minority can fulfill their preferences.

Hlynka had some Slavic (Ukrainian?) blood in him, so much as I'd like it to be otherwise, I'm afraid it's unlikely.

It's a little strange to think that he wouldn't have been in contact with people close to Trump who would know that he's not dead. Of course, it would still make sense for him to be cautious about a second strike, so to speak.

I have never watched CNN but this appears to be false.

https://www.newsweek.com/fact-check-did-cnn-remove-covid-19-tracker-after-joe-biden-took-office-1564233

There's a pic of biden's inauguration speech with the counter on it, and on later days as well.

Maybe they showed it less frequently, I'm not in a position to judge.

The covid death counter is alive and well.

https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#maps_deaths-total

So going door to door and executing civilians is actually "attacking military outposts"? Or was that also the IDF?

Isn't that The Hill?

How does monarch authenticate with banks? Did you need to fork over your bank password?

What's wrong with Bluetooth?

They don't (as far as I know) "stop" others from getting that info, but they try to take it down from various places that are obligated for one reason or another to honor takedown requests. I have never used such a service.

The last time I was faced with a plaid page, they wanted me to enter my password in a plaid page, rather than my bank's page. Perhaps this has changed, but there's simply no way that I'd trust plaid not to retain my password in some regarded way.

That was the primary, not the general, and you'll notice that there are two Republicans splitting the vote.

Thanks for the correction. Clark county was still blue in the 2022 general.

https://archive.is/mZo7J

I expect a win by less than two points, but mayhaps I'll eat crow on that expectation.

Perhaps, but that doesn't prove that this was supposed to hurt Kent. I don't have sub-county numbers but I don't see why someone would target this mailbox to hurt the Republican candidate.

I thought we were talking about the one in Clark County, and was unaware of the Portland one.

The OP was about the Portland one.

They're intending to hurt the Republican candidate by setting fire to ballots in urban Portland? Do you think those ballots leaned R or leaned D?

Edit: there are two burnt mailboxes. One in the 1000 block of Southeast Morrison Street, Portland. This is not even in Washington so obviously it has nothing to do with Joe Kent. The other one was in the Fisher's Landing transit center in Vancouver. That is actually in WA-03 but Clark county, which contains Vancouver, has Kent lagging behind majorly, so I really don't see the connection at all.

Plaid requires you to give them your bank password, right? You'll never catch me doing that.