TripleCross: A Linux eBPF rootkit framework
8 points • 0 comments
From 2/13/2012, 7:32:14 AM till now, @caust1c has achieved 1952 Karma Points with the contribution count of 238.
Recent @caust1c Activity
TripleCross: A Linux eBPF rootkit framework
8 points • 0 comments
Personally, Uber doesn't come off to me as an engineering culture that values simplicity.
And in fact, in this very article, the last paragraph actually states that they are aiming to increase the complexity of the change validation process?!?
> Additionally, it helped our team focus on increasing the complexity and features of our change validation process.
Personally, I haven't been super impressed with any of the engineering projects I've heard come out of Uber, but what they're doing obviously works to some degree so I can't be one to judge.
How We built a $1M ARR open source SaaS
522 points • 106 comments
I feel similarly. Globalization can and probably should boil down to rare materials and high-profit items, not bulk food, disposable consumables etc. I see that as a healthy reduction in globalization while still providing sufficient international trade to maintain relations. Note that I haven't read any of his work.
Nice, thank you!
Yeah I love making prospective customers feel pain too.
/s
The color changing on this page gives me a migraine:
I like Deno in principle, but I'd love to see how Slack, Github and Netlify are using it.
The Illustrated QUIC Connection
185 points • 37 comments
Been using this feature since they introduced it and can say that I'm very pleased with it so far in combination with it's 1password integration.
When creating an account somewhere, fastmail automatically generates a new email for the site via an API in one click.
Highly recommend.
It's really funny to me to hear founder-owners be telling people not to talk about politics at work while the employees usually have 1/10th to 1/100th of the shares in the company, if any at all.
Considering most wealth in tech is tied up in equity, and that founders are overwhelmingly white men, it feels oppressive.
"Hertzbleed": New vuln in Intel and AMD CPUs lets hackers steal encryption keys
14 points • 1 comments
Main discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31738029
The above statements are not mutually exclusive.
Coinbase lays off 1100 employees
23 points • 5 comments
Nice! Thanks for the reply! Looking forward to see where this goes! :-)
It was my understanding that those databases do have sparse indexes, but admittedly I may have applied that assumption based on my majority experience with Clickhouse where it uses LSM Tree engines and also has a sparse index.
Would it be correct to say this is like an embeddable clickhouse engine, minus the SQL interface and using Arrow and Parquet as the storage format?
How does it compare to BadgerDB/RocksDB/LevelDB? I see that it's using Arrow and Parquet of course, but the Sparse Index sounds very similar to LSM Tree like storage engines, except using something like a K-Way Merge algorithm and a heap structure to manage that somehow?
I'm more of an operator and user of these systems, so as an operator I care more about the usability than what's underneath, but also am reasonably skeptical of new databases since theres literally hundreds being written every year.
So what benefits does this structure and data format provide over classical LSM-like databases which are currently dominating the high-write-throughput embedded DB space?
That's the vibe I'm getting.
Looking through his travel history, this man must have a massive carbon footprint.
I really hope that the world stops idolizing the digital nomad lifestyle.
Bill to require job postings to include salaries passes Washington Senate
360 points • 324 comments
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