We designed the MinIO Enterprise Key Management Server (KMS) for the encryption challenges associated with billions of objects and hundreds of thousands of #encryption events per second. Highly available and fault tolerant, it delivers consistent performance even at the scale required by exabyte-sized deployments. We give you all the details here: https://t.co/ahBRW8lOd1 #EnterpriseObjectStore
Exabyte scale infrastructure requires specific features that extend beyond the core #objectstore. That’s why we’re introducing the MinIO Enterprise Object Store.
Designed for commercial customers, the #EnterpriseObjectStore includes features that span observability, key management, S3 data firewall, data catalog, caching service and a new global console.
Stay with us today and tomorrow as we walk you through each feature.
https://t.co/hkWITSdOfM
We are looking for more beta partners to test our #serverless and superfast #sql query engine for unstructured data, powered by #avx512. Please reach out to us if you are interested! https://t.co/ecTzS0ZKQD
Live and interactive @grafana dashboard with 1 billion records for the @github archive data. Powered by the Sneller plugin for Grafana and Sneller's #avx512 accelerated #sql engine https://t.co/BFVKgLGiBL
Intel is extending its instruction set. "Intel® APX doubles the number of general-purpose registers (GPRs) from 16 to 32. This allows the compiler to keep more values in registers; as a result, APX-compiled code contains 10% fewer loads and more than 20% fewer stores than the same code compiled for an Intel® 64 baseline.2 Register accesses are not only faster, but they also consume significantly less dynamic power than complex load and store operations."
People complaining about the Go design decision on private/public are quite funny. At the same time they cannot see how superior to trending languages the Go is. Its tooling and package system shine. Its type system is extremely practical. Its concurrency approach is fantastic.
A common managerial view is that people are a commodity and that knowledge is embedded in the books and the code. This view is badly wrong when it comes to innovation.
Checkout Sneller’s #sql reference guide with robust support for many extensions including reg-exp, geo, bucketing and even “dynamic schema” discovery for JSON docs using SNELLER_DATASHAPE: https://t.co/8lMWT2mVoI
In a world of small companies, performance is all anyone cares about. People hiring for a startup don't care whether you've even graduated from college, let alone which one. All they care about is what you can do. Which is in fact all that should matter, even in a large organization. The reason credentials have such prestige is that for so long the large organizations in a society tended to be the most powerful. But in the US at least they don't have the monopoly on power they once did, precisely because they can't measure (and thus reward) individual performance. Why spend twenty years climbing the corporate ladder when you can get rewarded directly by the market? (Paul Graham)
cc @JohnDCook