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grejdi

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1 points·by grejdi·vor 2 Jahren·0 comments

OpenAI Co-Founder (Greg Brockman) Returns to Startup After Monthslong Leave

bloomberg.com
4 points·by grejdi·vor 2 Jahren·0 comments

Apple Hearing Study shares preliminary insights on tinnitus

apple.com
1 points·by grejdi·vor 2 Jahren·0 comments

NPR names tech executive Katherine Maher to lead in turbulent era

npr.org
2 points·by grejdi·vor 2 Jahren·0 comments

comments

grejdi
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Working on a couple of demos. Here is a sample of the monthly email the system sends out to one of my demo accounts: https://www.dropbox.com/s/oahcy4264byz9zr/Screen%20Shot%2020...
grejdi
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
I've been building Emailic for the last few months. https://emailic.com

You can use it to drive automation in external apps, without having to leave your inbox. Zapier and other no-code solutions have such integrations, but they are expensive and require access to all your emails. This was something I was not willing to give up, for privacy reasons.

I've currently completed a Webhook (https://emailic.com/apps/webhook/) and Upload to Dropbox (https://emailic.com/apps/dropbox_upload/) integration. Check it out, and let me know what you all think! (Email address is in my profile.)
grejdi
·vor 5 Jahren·discuss
Webhooks are great for producers of events, and I'd argue that it's too cumbersome for them to provide an '/events' endpoint primary because of scaling. With webhooks, they can offload events at their own pace.

For consumers, I agree with most here that Kafka is certainly overkill. We've gotten away with a very simple architecture to have reliable event consumption. We point all webhooks to an (AWS) API Gateway backed by Lambdas. The Lambdas push the events to an SQS queue (FIFO-queue, if it needs some sort of sequence), and we take our time consuming the events through a very generic poll.