Okay now I am concerned. We're using Neon. We can move easily at this point, but I'm sure they have huge customers storing many terabytes of data where this may be genuinely hard to do.
I went to Archive.org and figured out that in 2023, they announced they were shutting down on May 30th, all databases shutdown on June 30th, only available for downloads after that, and deleted on July 30th.
Same boat here. Not really looking to have to move but I'm incredibly thankful that I never integrated with Neon more than using Postgres. I don't depend on/need their API or other branching features.
I hate that this is what I've become, I want to try some of the cool features "postgres++" providers offer but I actively avoid most features fearing the potential future migration. I got burned using the Data API on Aurora Serverless and then leaving them and having to rewrite a bunch of code.
However, does anyone know a way to set all text-like documents to open with a single editor (for example Zed) on Mac? Even text files without any extensions?
It wouldn't be possible with the current interface, but I have a feeling it's possible. I'm thinking it's part of a new configuration option "type" that allows you to define openers for categories of files (text,video,etc.)
Apache Iceberg builds an additional layer on top of Parquet files that let's you do ACID transactions, rollbacks, and schema evolution.
A Parquet file is a static file that has the whole data associated with a table. You can't insert, update, delete, etc. It's just it. It works ok if you have small tables, but it becomes unwieldy if you need to do whole-table replacements each time your data changes.
Apache Iceberg fixes this problem by adding a metadata layer on top of smaller Parquet files (at a 300,000 ft overview).
I knot you’re not OP, but and while this explanation is good, it doesn’t make sense to frame all this as a “problem” for parquet. It’s just a file format, it isn’t intended to have this sort of scope.
The problem is that the "parquet is beautiful" is extended all the time to pointless things - pq doesn't support appending updates so let's merge thousands of files together to simulate a real table - totally good and fine.
Well… when Parquet came out, it was the first necessary evolutionary step required to solve the lack of the metadata problem in CSV extracts.
So, it is CSV++ so to speak, or CSV + metadata + compact data storage in a singular file, but not a database table gone astray to wander the world on its own as a file.
I play music in my car over bluetooth only from my watch. Works even without having the iPhone nearby. But yes, I agree with you. The Apple Watch can and should support almost all features the iPhone has. Three features I would like to see: hotspot, switching apps while on call, and Airplay music to soundbars.
You'd be happier with a virtual machine I think. Last time I put FreeBSD on a RPi it was less than satisfying, though to be fair it was a Pi Zero and it was quite a while ago, so support was very early.
The FreeBSD Handbook is a great resource. Read it and see if it tickles your fancy.
I should mention Tigris[0] here. They're also a new Object Storage service, but they have this two-way replication facility with another S3-compatible service. The primary purpose they built it for is to mirror files from your existing S3 to Tigris as files are requested.
However they also have an option to copy files that are added to Tigris, to S3 automatically [1] (`--shadow-write-through`). I asked their founder if it's okay to use it as an extra redundancy continuously instead of a one-time migration, and they said they have no issues with it.
I've been using the Linear Mobile beta from TestFlight for a few months, and I have to say, it's a really well-designed app, and the animations are just beautiful.
While their corporate structure is shadowy, their revenue distribution between creators is not. The source for this is in this video [0][1] by TLDR Business.
Essentially, all the money collected by subscriptions is paid to creators based on the number of views on their videos.
I went to Archive.org and figured out that in 2023, they announced they were shutting down on May 30th, all databases shutdown on June 30th, only available for downloads after that, and deleted on July 30th.