greendata
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4 years ago
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on: No-code low-code companies show positive financial results
Cool! I don't understand the exact "schema" issue. Is that your database schema? Having written frameworks for deploying lambda in the past, I can say as recently as 2018 lambda was fairly hard to debug and in general using AWS is difficult for small companies. It's really designed for big business and large organizations where it works really well.
There are some workarounds, for example if your data ingestion is a lot of users uploading excel files, you can just upload from the client side directly to S3 with a pre-signed S3 URL without having to touch lambda. Then you can process the data on S3 using lambda or whatever you want. There are other strategies if you're ingesting real time data.
Yeah, if you're just using plain TypeScript you can certainly re-write crud apps all day and that definitely happens, in fact it's almost certain to happen.
Thanks for sharing. Following along to see how this works for you.
greendata
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4 years ago
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on: No-code low-code companies show positive financial results
What stack did you use? On the backend, certain frameworks like Rails/Django can reduce this issue, but certainly for Rails you'll always need a dev around and hopefully the same one who built it. That's very hard to keep.
There's still a lot of chaos on the front end and the favored stack changes every few years. The devs three years from now might not be as familiar with the stack you used. It's honestly a nightmare at the small business level for front end.
As a dev, what's happening now with Zapier, Bubble, Tray.io, etc mirrors what we saw with static sites and Wix, squarespace ten years ago. They are not really at parity for SAAS apps but soon will be and then in a few years they'll be even better. Around 2000 you could easily spend 100,000 on a static website of a quality you can get for free now.
The thing with Bubble etc is that to remain competitive you will likely want to add functionality and anything advanced, anything that really moves the company beyond competitors, will require writing code (or buying an expensive service) and that's ok to add later when you've validated the idea. The downside of this is that's it's so easy to make a SAAS app that your profits are much lower. Apps that could have generated 100k/month are now doing 10k/month and a lot of devs have moved onto different problems like blockchain/defi/etc. We've already had great no code in wordpress for a long time and now it's just moving onto serious SAAS apps.
The new paradigm is definitely going to be Bubble/Zapier/etc plus the code that makes your app profitable added as necessary when necessary.
greendata
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8 years ago
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on: Supreme Court Takes Up Internet Sales Tax Conundrum
But how do they receive the credit card payments? What company is the one that actually receives the credit card payments from the consumer? Is it the "authorized distributors"? Or is the bank account that receives the CC payment linked to the parent company? It seems that states could go after the location that actually receives the credit card payment (if it's not a Caribbean corporation).
greendata
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8 years ago
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on: Ask HN: How do you keep track of releases/deployments of dozens micro-services?
That's very valuable advice. Thank you. I've been following the serverless.com model of 1 APIG to 1 lambda, but that quickly puts you over the AWS limits when trying to manage hundreds or thousands of micro-services.
greendata
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8 years ago
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on: Ask HN: How do you keep track of releases/deployments of dozens micro-services?
That's a great model. Do you use cloudformation each for deployment? If so, have you thought of creating a single cloudformation template for the whole deployment so you can do the entire deployment in one stack update?
Have you encountered any issues to watch out for when only using one APIG for each environment (150 micro-services). Have you encountered any downsides to doing this versus 1 micro-service to 1 APIG? I'm also running into the Gateway throttle limits and I think deploying many micro-services (like you have done) to 1 APIG is the best solution.
greendata
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8 years ago
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on: Homeowners faced an Airbnb nightmare as renters left them facing huge fines
Exactly, the landlord will win in court but never collect from the tenant. The landlord should sue Airbnb directly in small claims court.
greendata
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9 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Underemployed and anxious. What would you do?
I agree. The bootcamps have a probably done a great job of flooding the market at the low level. It's pretty clear that bootcamps are the new ITT tech. I think a lot these bootcamps are selling false promises and preying on people trying to better themselves.
greendata
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9 years ago
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on: High-Memory Instances and $5 Linodes
What company?
greendata
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9 years ago
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on: Most Depressed Adults in the U.S. Remain Untreated
Part of the problem is that the cost of therapy, and all medical care, is skyrocketing in the US. We're working on lowering the cost with online therapy. We use a break-fix model where you only pay if we help fix your issues.
http://cheeseburgertherapy.com
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: A Unicorn Is the Last Thing This Web 2.0 Survivor Wants
The interest rates have a substantial effect on the price of houses. It's the same with the price of education.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Why do Chinese political leaders have engineering degrees?
Mitt Romney and Donald Trump both have business degrees. I'm not saying I do or do not support them but they are not social science/humanities/liberal arts. Unless you count business as liberal arts.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Appalachian Miners Are Learning to Code
Signs of a bubble about to collapse
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: 'All You Americans Are Fired'
They do better work at that wage. You will definitely find well-performing local workers at a higher wage. Responsible and sane local workers won't work for that wage. According to the Wall Street Journal they were paying $750/month plus room and board. That's too low for even the imported workers which is the reason they are "running away." These farmers are essentially recreating serfdom.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Django 1.9 Released
I mostly agree. At this point they are both excellent frameworks with all similar features. Django has a really nice admin out of the box that some people love.
Rails is built with a "convention over configuration" philosophy. Rails apps tend to look similar whereas Django apps tend to be setup in a number of different ways. The downside of Rail's "convention over configuration" setup is that devs can get things up and running fast and then get frustrated and lost if something breaks....but it's really not that hard to dig around the code. With Django new devs get lost first and figure everything out. After a few months of heavy use and breaking things you won't notice much of a difference between the two. I find rails a bit easier to work with but I like python so I use django/flask.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Should Custom Software Developers Be Generalists or Specialists?
You'll definitely find specialists in python but they'll also be experts in specific frameworks or packages like Django/Pylons/Pyramid etc. I'd say the same thing goes for ruby...if you're a ruby expert it's almost explicit that you'll at least have an intermediate knowledge of rails.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Engineer commuting from Hawaii to San Francisco to save on rent
It's satire.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Blue Bottle Coffee Co just raised $70M. What makes them so unique?
Venture capital is very "cheap" right now and easy to get. We're in a private equity bubble.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Getting Fucked by Stripe
I don't think you can advertise that those grow lights or fertilizer are to be used for specifically illegal activities. One can use grow lights for many different plants. This company is simply poorly named and the marketing is aimed specifically at marijuana which is unfortunately illegal on a federal level.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: Getting Fucked by Stripe
Indeed there are. Many businesses are committing crimes without even realizing it, especially things like structuring. These crimes are often selectively enforced.
greendata
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10 years ago
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on: How the DEA took a young man’s life savings without charging him with a crime
Many US cities are near bankrupt and probably a lot more will be in the next ten years. There will be enormous political pressure to cut costs. One way to cut costs is to reduce pensions or fail to fulfill pension promises. I don't advocate this and in fact I think the police are being setup in some ways. By allowing some police to engage in what looks like theft the general public will be amenable to pension cuts in the future.
Just see Detroit as an example of our possible future.
There are some workarounds, for example if your data ingestion is a lot of users uploading excel files, you can just upload from the client side directly to S3 with a pre-signed S3 URL without having to touch lambda. Then you can process the data on S3 using lambda or whatever you want. There are other strategies if you're ingesting real time data.
Yeah, if you're just using plain TypeScript you can certainly re-write crud apps all day and that definitely happens, in fact it's almost certain to happen.
Thanks for sharing. Following along to see how this works for you.