To me, its completely worth it. I am able to replicate boxes and environments rapidly without having to spend time re-creating or worrying about system issues. Also makes your dev and your prod easier to manage and removes variabilities.
Been in the IoT space for over 10 years and this is much needed. In my experience, Cellular based IoT devices are inherently more secure than non cellular devices due to the network security and the certifications they go through. Of course, there are exceptions to this rule. Would be interested to learn more about the proposed regulations while not impacting the pace of innovation.
I sometimes think that everything we discuss here is so much smaller when compared to global warming. But I am a believer in human ingenuity and think there will be a solution before things get too dire.
> there will be a solution before things get too dire
There is. It’s called money. If you have enough of it, things will not get dire for you in your lifetime. And enough of it will keep your kids’ kids from feeling the effects too seriously.
Money is both the solution and the problem. Until the people who can insulate themselves from climate change through wealth. are willing to significantly reduce their current quality of life, there’s no chance to avoid dire-ness for those without money.
And honestly in terms of direness for many, the money has been spent and now it’s just about waiting for the bill to come due.
i think the rich will be insulated to a certain extent, but the weather is already making most of the world, including much of the rich, miserable.
i mean, the solution to rich kids is going to be like... don't go outside for the next three months.
if you're a rich adult, you can fly north for the summer, but you'll have to go to.... somewhere where it's not blazing hot in the summer? where is that?
and then you'll be breathing heavy wildfire smoke?
A rich person having to stay indoors more than they like is totally different than a person in Iran or India being cooked alive by 120-150F heat indexes.
I live in the US in a wildfire-affected area, but it’s only incredibly unpleasant for me, not dire.
did you even do a grammar test on your page. English may not be your first language but you should atleast run the entire copy through chatgpt and ask it to optimize it. In the below copy, even your company name is not spelled right.
"Affordably access data to help your land your next round, Invesotr Radar garuntees ability to upgrade and cancel subscriptions at any time."
I find the utility of pg_vector very useful since it also acts as the default DB for a ton of other functions. Interested to see if folks think that a combination of postgres with something like qdrant is the way to go? is the benefits worth the trade off in terms of ease of use and flexibility.
We don't handle that case in our S3 upload system. We only upload upon rotation, which adds a latency of around a day (less for very noisy log files). For live debugging, we either replicate the problem in local environment (if possible), or the dev logs into the production server and runs `tail` on the log file.
I feel the same way with DataDog. All I need is a tool to monitor logs. First I tried Signoz and the docker gave me an error on clickhouse. Then I tried Loki but the docker agent never sent the logs and I received no labels although I received a test one I sent. I tried azure log analytics and lost the plot after creating about 15 services. Paying a premium to DataDog just for log analytics seems to be an overkill
SigNoz has pretty broad compatibility with whatever docker environment, if you're interested in trying it out you may want to join the community slack and get it working: https://signoz.io/slack
Please don't take this wrong but if you want to adopt a new observability solution you'll need to invest some time in it. Signoz and Loki work well. If you can't set them up in a day it's time to look elsewhere but you really need to have a serious crack at them first.
Your suggestion is valid and I did spend about 2 days in total across all 3. the least amount of time being the azure log analytics. I spent 10 minutes setting up the datadog agent and paying for that convenience.
Nice tool! I can see a ton of uses for this especially given that MQTT is fast emerging as the default for a number of IoT apps. Couple of things
1. Do you plan to offer this as a tool that could be embedded within other platforms. A number of enterprises already have a dashboard tool and dont want another one.
2. How would this work for someone who is using mqtt but needs some calculations done or related metrics to be inferred before displaying on the graph.
Currently I don't know enterprise needs and requirements. Only worked with hobby enthusiasts and small businesses. But I'll keep my radar open for what we can offer for enterprise.
Sadly, right now the dashboard just receives the data and works with it. It's not doing special calculations or such, just simply formatting for charts. But I understand the need and it can be really great feature.