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Surprising how badly Jetbrains implemented AI. Apparently to such an extent that even after multiple years of LLM's someone felt confident enough to build a company that can do better.

This looks really neat, interesting technical writeup as well!


Cool social experiment. It's interesting how narrow the scope of all top voted PRs are: change this or that detail in the voting (daily, count down votes etc), or make it more efficient (rust).

I wonder if this has the potential to build a "community" that will take this into a completely different direction, or if it will neatly stay within the initial boundaries.


Is the dependancy on Cloudflare worth the saved time in infrastructure? Getting a big bare metal and deploying a docker should go a long way.

This implementation sounds fully dependant on a service that Zed has little to say about.


FYI: Cloudflare provides an open source version of their Workers runtime[0], so the lock-in isn't as strong as it once was.

[0]: https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd


I think if the end game is to run workers runtime then they could also run something else from the start.

Its gonna be hard to compete with the scaling cloudflare offers if they migrate to their own dedicated infra, but it of course would become much cheaper than paying per request


Smart 11 | React Native Software Engineer | Netherlands (Breda) / Remote | Part or Full time | smart11.ai

Smart11 helps soccer players to become more intelligent on the field. We're a small team of 3 engineers and are looking for a react native developer to continue development on our mobile app.

Our soccer learning methods rely heavily on video (and a touch of vision AI) to help players learn from their own actions on the field. The app is crucial in that process, and used hundreds of hours a week by clubs and pro players alike. Your work might directly contribute to the improvement of soccer players around the world!

We're a productive, balanced team, and are looking for someone with a builder mentality. Apply at connect [at] smart11.ai, or send me a PM (I'm the CTO). If you're interested but are only experienced in related techniques, please do get in touch, we like to invest in the right people!


Really love what you're building. Sent in my application to your personal email, I hope that's okay.


Thanks for the suggestion, I missed that!


Super easy? Getting that setup for the first time from zero knowledge will probably take a few days. And that's before understanding all the intricacies like your AWS bill, the hidden costs of cloud, properly securing IAM and setting up your VPC etc etc


Not once in my entire career have I seen people successfully avail themselves of the cloud's purported benefits. I have, however, seen a lot of happy account managers in Las Vegas during Re:Invent, oh yes.


Comparably easy, yes. I'm not talking specifically about AWS btw, but even there it is easy.

If someone has zero knowledge, then everything will take them a long time, including hosting on-prem or so.


I got downvoted for saying something similar for standing up a web app from scratch and getting it deployed securely.

You are absolutely correct


Which is peanuts compared to the 350 million that the VCs invested. You're totally right, but I think the internal financial pressure is higher.


Ah, so it’s not about open source and moral responsibilities. It’s about the responsibility we all owe to VCs to ensure they make money. Gotcha.


Isn’t that the deal we sign up for when we take VC money?

I like free money as much as the next guy, but VC isn’t it.


Who's we though? The former Garantia data did, but redis users didn't.

(And also I'd argue most of redis' value to users was already in place before the VC backed company got involved)


All the Redis users have is a license to use and an expectation. An expectation is a belief that Santa will bring presents, that's all.

Where the value is or was is pure sophistry. You don't have a crystal ball, just like everyone else.

All this discussion is envious bellyaching from those that are probably leeches themselves. They just want the free gravy train running for themselves.


And the license allows them to fork it. Which is what they are doing. Open Source working exactly as it should. I just want to be sure the facts are understood. Amazon has many faults and there are plenty of reasons to dislike and not use them. But leeching off of Redis Labs is not one of them.


You’re right of course.

From my point of view managed databases only really make sense for toy projects, if you’re using these things at scale it’s much more economical to buy some servers and hire some people of your own, and use plain pre-VC Redis. But big corporations seem to have some kind of a fetish for lighting money on fire, and the fight here is fundamentally over in whose fireplace to do it.


> From my point of view managed databases only really make sense for toy projects

it is more expensive to buy managed, but you offload work. I would imagine toy projects are more cash constrained, and makes more sense to rent cheap servers and roll your own.

On the other hand, larger scale projects would rather pay to offload the work of managing and scaling redis.


Toy project are both cash and time constrained, but they’re at a scale where managed is cheap enough because they want to get you hooked.

Large scale projects can take advantage of economies of scale and hire ops people. I’ve found cloud support pretty lacklustre compared to having someone to talk to face-to-face who understands the whole stack for your particular application.

Of course conventional corporate wisdom says waste as much as you like on services as long as you keep payroll down, that may be a bigger challenge than any of the technical ones.


In my experience using redis, one of its better attributes is how easy it is to manage and scale. I've never scaled it to say, Facebook levels, but at that scale, I'm not sure managed services make much sense either.


Yes, it is ludicrous. My company uses hosted databases and "droplets" from DigitalOcean. Their pricing is absolutely absurd. I always wondered how they stay in business, but now I know.


I'm using it for a 10.000+ multisite installation (quite simple personal blogs), and even though it has it quirks it works quite well. Almost nothing is best in class and a slight pain to get it working, but the sheer size of the ecosystem is still it's biggest plus. In general every problem or feature you can imagine already exists or is easy to bolt on.


This is a bit too much of an apples vs oranges. Use cases for PHP (easy to develop, maintain websites) are different from those for Go and Rust.

Obviously, PHP came from a place of great inconsistency, and the remains are still there, including the popularity to rant on it. PHP is getting significantly better though, and while a long one, I hugely prefer this route over something more abrupt like python 2-3. The first 3 or so points are valid, but annoyances at best. For the points about closures, statements, inline classes etc., they are just features from other languages that aren't in PHP.


I can't for async/await to reach PHP and see code that awaits 5 queries and 3 http requests in a row. Perfection.


This sentence does not make sense and still I understood it perfectly. It's the reason I love PHP over JS.


I think they do. Given the damage that leaked keys can do (especially in the Bitcoin mining area) it must be an expensive problem for them.


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