Today, we’re announcing that @Amazon will invest up to $4 billion in Anthropic. The agreement is part of a broader collaboration to develop reliable and high-performing foundation models.
I had a great time on Zig Showtime today talking about Ghostty and showcasing some interesting Zig patterns I use in the project. I've uploaded all the slides and a text version of the talk in addition to the video link: https://t.co/hIShWH9ILo
📢#TheServerlessBook📖
Serverless Development on AWS: Building Enterprise-Scale Enterprise Solutions
Luke (@level_out) & I are excited to reveal the project we've been working on to bring out our #serverless experience on AWS via @OReillyMedia🚀
https://t.co/j1FZLpqt9g
@mattgillard Don't rely on one tool. Try to diversify based on the quality.
https://t.co/WhFt9NVN2e would be best for reservations and spot instances while https://t.co/ZAj0eGkUxG might be a better tool to monitor and manage your cost in a larger org.
This video, seemingly about FastPass at DisneyLand, is a fantastic introduction to queues and quality of service as complex interacting systems of technology, people, and incentives: https://t.co/4ReHV85vfX
Erlang's work on telephone systems in the early 20th century is foundational to how we think about, and build, distributed and cloud systems 100 years later. How can this work, done before modern computing was even a field, be so important?
Since Amazon EKS supports Fargate, has anyone taken the next logical / unhinged step and gotten it to orchestrate containers as Lambda functions?
I'm serious; a 15 minute lifespan is more than enough for a stateless application pod.
"Scaling bad unit economics, hiring quickly and badly, listening to investors, raising too much money, and not really understanding our users."
— a founder's list of the mistakes he made in his previous startup
It's a pattern week. I just added another #serverless pattern showing how to enable access logs for API Gateway to CloudWatch. This is very helpful when debugging integrations, auth, and latency issues. AWS SAM example here: https://t.co/ZDLtrHGYNV
The story of MemDS in the DynamoDB paper is a fascinating one. DynamoDB used to use a metadata cache with a very high hit rate ("cache hit rate was approximately 99.75 percent"). What's not to love about a cache with a 99.75% hit rate?
Episode #142: @Cloudflare Workers with Michael Hart (@hichaelmart) is now available! Listen online or with your favorite podcast app! 🎧 #serverless https://t.co/XZgGHJaatD
Joe's right about this. But why do caches lead to long outages? Let's explore one reason with a small simulation, starting with a really simple two-tier system, and seeing what happens when a cache gets emptied.