AFAIK Stripe and Plaid support only a fraction of the countries that PayPal does. And PayPal is still a global brand - recognized by almost everyone, everywhere.
"I’m not a mechanical engineer, but I watched a five-minute YouTube video on how a diesel engine works, so I can tell you that mechanical engineering is a solved problem."
> it assumes companies that are replacing labor with LLMs are willing to pay as much as (or at least a significant fraction of) the labor costs they are replacing.
And it’s worth reiterating that most (all) of these LLM/AI providers are currently operating at significant losses. If they aim to become even modestly profitable, prices will have to increase substantially.
True. But the US want to remain the country everyone relies on if it wants to preserve the dollar as the world's primary trade, reserve and settlement currency.
Dollar dominance gives the US disproportionate leverage over global finance and allows it to shape the rules of the system. Absent this asymmetry, it is difficult to imagine US tariffs or financial pressure (or any kind of pressure) would carry comparable global impact.
AFAIK Manifest v2 is still part of the chromium codebase, and there is an intention to continue supporting it, depending on how difficult that turns out to be.
1 GB of RAM for Postgres is really only useful for tinkering IMHO. Even for development, you’ll quickly need more memory, so HA doesn’t provide much value here. If you go with something even remotely reasonable (4 GB RAM, 200 GB SSD, 1/2 vCPU — and that’s still on the low end), the cost jumps to about $290/month. For that price, you could easily hire someone to set up HA Postgres for you on Hetzner or OVH and once configured, HA Postgres typically requires minimal ongoing maintenance.
Also, this is a shared server, not a truly dedicated one like you’d get with bare-metal providers. So, calling it "Metal" might be misleading marketing trick, but if you want someone to always blame and don’t mind overpaying for that comfort, then the managed option might be the right thing.
> A start-up needs to have an exit to pay back investors
It depends on the kind of investors you want to attract for your startup. Some investors are interested in building a slow-growth, long-term, stable company, while others prefer a higher-risk approach and will expect fast results. IMHO choosing the right kind of capital is just as important as focusing on the product.
It loads instantly, and memory usage is minimal <80 MB.
It does seem like vlf requires configuration and adjustment, e.g. navigation with the normal keys works differently (jumps to beginning/end of current chunk instead of the whole file). Basically it exposes the chunk concept to the user.
In Fresh it's designed into the core and should be more transparent (although there are still limitations).
And don’t hesitate to use a JRE (Java Runtime Environment) if all you need is to run java/jvm applications - assuming the application doesn’t already ship with its own runtime. A JDK is roughly 140 MB, while a JRE is about 60 MB (and can be further minimized). I’ve seen installations of the full OpenJDK just to run apps, which is unnecessary in most cases.
From the ping output, I can see HN is using m5hosting.com. This is why HN was up yesterday, even though everything on CF was down.
> Writing high-throughput web applications is easier than ever. Hosting them on the open web is harder than ever.
Writing proper high-throughput applications was never easy and will never be. It is a little bit easier because we have highly optimized tools like nginx or nodejs so we can offset critical parts. And hosting is "harder than ever" if you complicate the matter, which is a quite common pattern these days. I saw people running monstrosities to serve some html & js in the name of redundancy. You'd be surprised how much a single bare-metal (hell, even a proper VM from DigitalOcean or Vultr) can handle.
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